Abstract

The paper discusses methods for robust audio-video broadcast over the digital video broadcasting-handheld (DVB-H) system. DVB-H includes a link-layer forward error correction (FEC) scheme known as multiprotocol encapsulation (MPE) FEC, which provides equal error protection (EEP) to the transmitted media streams. Several approaches for unequal error protection (UEP) have been proposed in the literature, and the applicability of some of them to DVB-H is analyzed in the paper. A link-layer UEP method based on priority segmentation of the media streams is chosen for more detailed analysis. According to the method, audio and the most important coded video pictures are protected by MPE-FEC more robustly compared to the remaining coded pictures. In order to compare EEP and UEP in a DVB-H environment, an error-prone DVB-H channel was simulated, audio-visual clips were sent through it, and a comprehensive subjective quality evaluation was conducted in a controlled laboratory environment. The results of the subjective evaluation revealed that the use of UEP improves the subjective quality of some test clips noticeably when the channel conditions were severe, while in other tested channel conditions and clips, UEP and EEP performed equally well.

Highlights

  • Mobile television services are expected to gain popularity in the few years

  • In contrast to DVB-T, where usually audio-video elementary streams were directly packetized to MPEG-2 transport stream (TS) packets, digital video broadcasting-handheld (DVB-H) is primarily designed for carriage of Internet protocol (IP) datagrams

  • The paper reviewed some methods for unequal error protection (UEP) and analyzed their applicability to DVB-H

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Summary

Introduction

Mobile television services are expected to gain popularity in the few years. Digital video broadcasting-handhelds (DVB-H) [1] is among the most used technical solutions for providing low interactivity, mass mobile television services. The elementary transmission unit for DVB-H is a 188-byte MPEG-2 transport stream (TS) packet, specified in the MPEG-2 systems specification [3]. In contrast to DVB-T, where usually audio-video elementary streams were directly packetized to MPEG-2 TS packets, DVB-H is primarily designed for carriage of Internet protocol (IP) datagrams. In order to maintain compatibility with DVB-T, IP datagrams are packetized to multi-protocol encapsulation (MPE) sections as specified in [4], which are carried over MPEG-2 TS packets

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