Abstract

AOM Video 1 (AV1) and Versatile Video Coding (VVC) are the outcome of two recent independent video coding technology developments. Although VVC is the successor of High Efficiency Video Coding (HEVC) in the lineage of international video coding standards jointly developed by ITU-T and ISO/IEC within an open and public standardization process, AV1 is a video coding scheme that was developed by the industry consortium Alliance for Open Media (AOM) and that has its technological roots in Google's proprietary VP9 codec. This paper presents a compression efficiency evaluation for the AV1, VVC, and HEVC video coding schemes in a typical video compression application requiring random access. The latter is an important property, without which essential functionalities in digital video broadcasting or streaming could not be provided. For the evaluation, we employed a controlled experimental environment that basically follows the guidelines specified in the Common Test Conditions of the Joint Video Experts Team. As representatives of the corresponding video coding schemes, we selected their freely available reference software implementations. Depending on the application-specific frequency of random access points, the experimental results show averaged bit-rate savings of about 10–15% for AV1 and 36–37% for the VVC reference encoder implementation (VTM), both relative to the HEVC reference encoder implementation (HM) and by using a test set of video sequences with different characteristics regarding content and resolution. A direct comparison between VTM and AV1 reveals averaged bit-rate savings of about 25–29% for VTM, while the averaged encoding and decoding run times of VTM relative to those of AV1 are around 300% and 270%, respectively.

Highlights

  • More than eight years have passed since the publication of the first version of the High Efficiency Video Coding (HEVC) [1] standard

  • For multiscale structural similarity (MS-SSIM), the Bjøntegaard Delta rate (BD-rate) values are significantly lower than the PSNR-based BDrate values for AOM Video 1 (AV1), whereas the MS-SSIM-based values are similar to the PSNR-based values in the case of VVC reference software implementation (VTM)

  • This paper presented the results of an objective performance evaluation of the three video coding schemes AV1, Versatile Video Coding (VVC), and HEVC for random-access applications

Read more

Summary

INTRODUCTION

More than eight years have passed since the publication of the first version of the High Efficiency Video Coding (HEVC) [1] standard. The experiments of this study have been conducted by using the most recently available reference software implementations. These are HM-16.21 for HEVC, VTM-8.0 for VVC, and a snapshot from the AV1 Codec Library git repository [11]. The section describes the random access property, works out the differences in the representation of the temporal prediction structure between HM/VTM and AV1, and briefly discusses the complexity aspect.

PROBLEM STATEMENT
EXPERIMENTAL CONFIGURATION
RESULTS AND DISCUSSION
CONCLUSION
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call