Paper
12 February 2007 Relation between DSIS and DSCQS for temporal and spatial video artifacts in a wireless home environment
Author Affiliations +
Proceedings Volume 6492, Human Vision and Electronic Imaging XII; 64920L (2007) https://doi.org/10.1117/12.704407
Event: Electronic Imaging 2007, 2007, San Jose, CA, United States
Abstract
To interpret the impressions of observers, it is necessary to understand the relationship between components that influence perceived video quality. This paper addresses the effect of assessment methodology on the subjective judgement for spatial and temporal impaired video material, caused by video adaptation methods that come into play when there is variable throughput of video material (I-Frame Delay and Signal-to-Noise Ratio scalability). Judgement strategies used are the double-stimulus continuous-quality scale (DSCQS) and the double stimulus impairment scale (DSIS). Results show no evidence for an influence of spatial artifacts on perceived video quality with the presented judgement strategies. Results for the influence of temporal artifacts are less easy to interpret, because it is not possible to distinguish whether the non-linear relation between DSIS and DSCQS appeared because of the temporal artifacts themselves or presented scene content.
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Nele Van den Ende, Lydia M. J. Meesters, and Reinder Haakma "Relation between DSIS and DSCQS for temporal and spatial video artifacts in a wireless home environment", Proc. SPIE 6492, Human Vision and Electronic Imaging XII, 64920L (12 February 2007); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.704407
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KEYWORDS
Video

Signal to noise ratio

Cameras

Video processing

Video coding

Video compression

Image quality

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