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Farhad Pakdaman

Farhad Pakdaman

Academic rank: Assistant Professor
ORCID:
Education: PhD.
ScopusId:
Faculty: Faculty of Technology and Engineering
Address:
Phone: 011-35302903

Research

Title
SVM based approach for complexity control of HEVC intra coding
Type
JournalPaper
Keywords
HEVC, Complexity control, Intra coding, SVM, Machine learning, Video compression
Year
2021
Journal SIGNAL PROCESSING-IMAGE COMMUNICATION
DOI
Researchers Farhad Pakdaman ، Mahmoud Reza Hashemi ، Mohammad Ghanbari ، Moncef Gabbouj ، Li Yu

Abstract

The High Efficiency Video Coding (HEVC) is adopted by various video applications in recent years. Because of its high computational demand, controlling the complexity of HEVC is of paramount importance to appeal to the varying requirements in many applications, including power-constrained video coding, video streaming, and cloud gaming. Most of the existing complexity control methods are only capable of considering a subset of the decision space, which leads to low coding efficiency. While the efficiency of machine learning methods such as Support Vector Machines (SVM) can be employed for higher precision decision making, the current SVM-based techniques for HEVC provide a fixed decision boundary which results in different coding complexities for different video content. Although this might be suitable for complexity reduction, it is not acceptable for complexity control. This paper proposes an adjustable classification approach for Coding Unit (CU) partitioning, which addresses the mentioned problems of complexity control. Firstly, a novel set of features for fast CU partitioning is designed using image processing techniques. Then, a flexible classification method based on SVM is proposed to model the CU partitioning problem. This approach allows adjusting the performance-complexity trade-off, even after the training phase. Using this model, and a novel adaptive thresholding technique, an algorithm is presented to deliver video encoding within the target coding complexity, while maximizing the coding efficiency. Experimental results justify the superiority of this method over the state-of-the-art methods, with target complexities ranging from 20% to 100%.