Abstract

Recently, almost all the proposed adaptive video steganographic schemes are based on minimizing an additive embedding distortion. However, they ignore the hard fact that the additive embedding distortion is not quite suitable for video steganography because of the interplay of cover elements in video steganography. In this paper, an adaptive intra prediction mode based (IPM-based) video steganography is proposed by minimizing the non-additive distortion in HEVC. To reduce the complexity of minimizing the non-additive distortion, a multi-layered embedding structure combined with a proposed embed-ding distortion updating strategy is adopted to approximate the non-additive distortion in an additive form. Firstly, all IPMs are decomposed into multiple layers based on the distortion drift graph to offer multi-layered embedding. Each IPM in the same layer is considered to be independent, and syndrome-trellis code (STC) can be applied to embed the message segment into each layer with an additive distortion function sequentially. Then, a distortion function composed of self-distortion and drift-distortion is proposed to initialize the distortion of modifying each IPM. Finally, after embedding the first message segment into the IPMs in the first layer with the initialized distortions, an embedding distortion updating strategy is applied to update the distortions of the IPMs in the remaining layers dynamically. Ex-perimental results demonstrate that the proposed adaptive IPM-based video steganography can achieve much better perceptual quality and security performance than the state-of-the-art.

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