Depth quality of stereoscopic three-dimensional (S3D) videos is a significant factor which directly affects the quality of experience (QoE) associated with 3D video applications and services. Nevertheless, there remain limited reports on the investigation of depth perception and depth quality evaluation of S3D videos, which impedes further advancement and deployment of 3D video technology. This paper reports a series of subjective experiments which have been conducted to investigate the depth perception and its related properties of the human visual system (HVS) using S3D video compressed by the H.264/AVC standard. The experimental results reveal that the HVS response in depth perception varies at different frequencies and in varying orientations, and the distortions introduced by video coding can cause the loss of and/or variation in depth perception. By integration of binocular and monocular features (BM) extracted from left and right views of S3D video with respect to depth perception, a depth quality assessment model, herein referred to as BM-DQAM, is devised by training these stereoscopic and spatial orientation structural features with a support vector regression model. It is shown that the BM-DQAM provides a novel no-reference metric for evaluation of the depth quality of S3D videos. Based on two publicly available 3D video databases and the proposed depth perception assessment database, the experimental results show that the BM-DQAM has demonstrated better performance in assessing the depth quality in S3D video viewing than that of other metrics reported in the published literatures, correlating well with the HVS response in the depth perception assessment experiment.
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