Abstract

The MPEG-4 video compression standard incorporates several techniques to create error-resilient coded video. These techniques are effective against a certain level of errors. However, wireless channels often have very high error rates; thus channel coding is needed to reduce the number of errors in the compressed bitstream that is sent to the MPEG-4 video decoder. The structure of an MPEG-4 compressed bitstream lends itself to using unequal error protection to ensure fewer errors in the important portions of the bitstream. This paper discuses how unequal error protection can be used with the MPEG-4 error resilience tools and describes several experiments using both unequal and equal error protection on video sent through a simulated GSM channel. The results of these experiments show that when the bit error rate is high, unequal error protection can improve reconstructed video quality by as much as 1 dB compared with equal error protection.

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