Data compression of stereopairs
Abstract
This paper addresses the problem of stereopair data compression. Two fundamentally different techniques for compressing stereopairs are discussed. The first technique, called disparity-compensated transform-domain predictive coding, attempts to minimize the mean-square error between the original stereopair and the compressed stereopair. The second technique, called mixed-resolution coding, is a psychophysically justified technique that exploits known facts about human stereovision to code stereopairs in a subjectively acceptable manner. A method for assessing the quality of compressed stereopairs is also presented. It involves measuring the ability of an observer to perceive depth in coded stereopairs. It is found that observers generally perceived objects to be further away in compressed stereopairs than they did in originals. Finally, the problem of coding stereopairs is considered from a rate-distortion perspective. It is proved that the rate distortion limit for coding stereopairs cannot in general be achieved by a coder that first codes and decodes the right picture sequence independently of the left picture sequence, and then codes and decodes the left picture sequence given the decoded right picture sequence.
- Publication:
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IEEE Transactions on Communications
- Pub Date:
- April 1992
- Bibcode:
- 1992ITCom..40..684P
- Keywords:
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- Data Compression;
- Image Processing;
- Signal Encoding;
- Stereophotography;
- Image Analysis;
- Stereoscopic Vision;
- Visual Perception;
- Communications and Radar