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MPEG Compression

The acronym MPEG stands for Moving Picture Expert Group, which worked to generate the specifications under ISO, the International Organization for Standardization and IEC, the International Electrotechnical Commission. What is commonly referred to as "MPEG video" actually consists at the present time of two finalized standards, MPEG-11 and MPEG-22, with a third standard, MPEG-4, was finalized in 1998 for Very Low Bitrate Audio-Visual Coding. The MPEG-1 and MPEG-2 standards are similar in basic concepts. They both are based on motion compensated block-based transform coding techniques, while MPEG-4 deviates from these more traditional approaches in its usage of software image construct descriptors, for target bit-rates in the very low range, < 64Kb/sec. Because MPEG-1 and MPEG-2 are finalized standards and are both presently being utilized in a large number of applications, this paper concentrates on compression techniques relating only to these two standards. Note that there is no reference to MPEG-3. This is because it was originally anticipated that this standard would refer to HDTV applications, but it was found that minor extensions to the MPEG-2 standard would suffice for this higher bit-rate, higher resolution application, so work on a separate MPEG-3 standard was abandoned.

The current thrust is MPEG-7 "Multimedia Content Description Interface" whose completion is scheduled for July 2001. Work on the new standard MPEG-21 "Multimedia Framework" has started in June 2000 and has already produced a Draft Technical Report and two Calls for Proposals.

MPEG-1 was finalized in 1991, and was originally optimized to work at video resolutions of 352x240 pixels at 30 frames/sec (NTSC based) or 352x288 pixels at 25 frames/sec (PAL based), commonly referred to as Source Input Format (SIF) video. It is often mistakenly thought that the MPEG-1 resolution is limited to the above sizes, but it in fact may go as high as 4095x4095 at 60 frames/sec. The bit-rate is optimized for applications of around 1.5 Mb/sec, but again can be used at higher rates if required. MPEG-1 is defined for progressive frames only, and has no direct provision for interlaced video applications, such as in broadcast television applications.

MPEG-2 was finalized in 1994, and addressed issues directly related to digital television broadcasting, such as the efficient coding of field-interlaced video and scalability. Also, the target bit-rate was raised to between 4 and 9 Mb/sec, resulting in potentially very high quality video. MPEG-2 consists of profiles and levels. The profile defines the bitstream scalability and the colorspace resolution, while the level defines the image resolution and the maximum bit-rate per profile. Probably the most common descriptor in use currently is Main Profile, Main Level (MP@ML) which refers to 720x480 resolution video at 30 frames/sec, at bit-rates up to 15 Mb/sec for NTSC video. Another example is the HDTV resolution of 1920x1080 pixels at 30 frame/sec, at a bit-rate of up to 80 Mb/sec. This is an example of the Main Profile, High Level (MP@HL) descriptor. A complete table of the various legal combinations can be found in reference2.

 



 
next up previous
Next: MPEG Video Up: Video and Audio Compression Previous: Bit-rate Control
Dave Marshall
10/4/2001