FPGA-Based ROI Encoding for HEVC Video Bitrate Reduction

Published: 01 Jan 2020, Last Modified: 14 Nov 2024J. Circuits Syst. Comput. 2020EveryoneRevisionsBibTeXCC BY-SA 4.0
Abstract: The explosive growth of video applications has produced great challenges for data storage and transmission. In this paper, we propose a new ROI (region of interest) encoding solution to accelerate the processing and reduce the bitrate based on the latest video compression standard H.265/HEVC (High-Efficiency Video Coding). The traditional ROI extraction mapping algorithm uses pixel-based Gaussian background modeling (GBM), which requires a large number of complex floating-point calculations. Instead, we propose a block-based GBM to set up the background, which is in accord with the block division of HEVC. Then, we use the SAD (sum of absolute difference) rule to separate the foreground block from the background block, and these blocks are mapped into the coding tree unit (CTU) of HEVC. Moreover, the quantization parameter (QP) is adjusted according to the distortion rate automatically. The experimental results show that the processing speed on FPGA has reached a real-time level of 22 FPS (frames per second) for full high-definition videos (1,920×1,080), and the bitrate is reduced by 10% on average with stable video quality.
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