In this paper we describe a database, noted as RadEch Database, containing radar echoes from various targets. The data has been collected in controlled test environments at the premises of Military Academy -Republic of Serbia. Our goal is to provide a balanced and comprehensive database to enable reproducible research results in the field of classification of ground moving targets (pattern recognition). A time-frequency analysis of radar echoes has been performed, in order to identify the main features of the various targets. The RadEch Database is freely available for download and we hope that our database provides researchers with a valuable tool to benchmark and improve the performance of classification algorithms.
This paper deals with the delay, delay variation-jitter, packet loss rate and bandwidth as quality of service parameters, in the form of four types of video quality degradations. The impact of defined levels of degradation on subjective impressions (given as mean opinion scores) is analyzed. ReTRiEVED video dataset with publicly available subjective scores is used in the analysis. Three full-reference measures are used for objective assessment of video quality. The degree of consistency of subjective and objective quality scores is shown through scatter plots and quantitative measures (linear correlation coefficient and correlation of the ranks). Based on the interpolation functions, quality of service parameters are mapped to subjective experience. We show that jitter is a much more destructive effect than other degradation types.
Single and three-channel images are widely used in numerous applications. Due to the increasing volume of such data, they must be compressed where lossy compression offers more opportunities. Usually, it is supposed that, for a given image, a larger compression ratio leads to worse quality of the compressed image according to all quality metrics. This is true for most practical cases. However, it has been found recently that images are called “strange” for which a rate-distortion curve like dependence of the peak signal-to-noise ratio on the quality factor or quantization step, behaves non-monotonously. This might cause problems in the lossy compression of images. Thus, the basic subject of this paper are the factors that determine this phenomenon. The main among them are artificial origin of an image, possible presence of large homogeneous regions, specific behavior of image histograms. The main goal of this paper is to consider and explain the peculiarities of the lossy compression of strange images. The tasks of this paper are to provide definitions of strange images and to check whether non-monotonicity of rate-distortion curves occurs for different coders and metrics. One more task is to put ideas and methodology forward of further studies intended to detect strange images before their compression. The main result is that non-monotonous behavior can be observed for the same image for several quality metrics and coders. This means that not the coder but image properties determine the probability of an image to being strange. Moreover, both grayscale and color images can be strange, and both the natural scene and artificial images can be strange. This depends more on image properties than on image origin and number of channels. In particular, the percentage of pixels that belong to large homogeneous regions and image entropy play an important role. As conclusions, we outline possible directions of future research that, in the first order, relate to the analysis of images in large databases to establish parameters that show that a given image can be considered as strange.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.