An overview of 3D and free viewpoint video is given in this paper with special focus on related standardization activities in MPEG. Free viewpoint video allows the user to freely navigate within real world visual scenes, as known from virtual worlds in computer graphics. Examples are shown, highlighting standards conform realization using MPEG-4. Then the principles of 3D video are introduced providing the user with a 3D depth impression of the observed scene. Example systems are described again focusing on their realization based on MPEG-4. Finally multi-view video coding is described as a key component for 3D and free viewpoint video systems. The conclusion is that the necessary technology including standard media formats for 3D and free viewpoint is available or will be available in the near future, and that there is a clear demand from industry and user side for such applications. 3DTV at home and free viewpoint video on DVD will be available soon, and will create huge new markets.
Recently, popularity of 3D video has been growing significantly and it may turn into a home user mass market in the near future. However, diversity of 3D video content formats is still hampering wide success. An overview of available and emerging 3D video formats and standards is given, which are mostly related to specific types of applications and 3D displays. This includes conventional stereo video, multiview video, video plus depth, multiview video plus depth and layered depth video. Features and limitations are explained. Finally, depth enhanced stereo (DES) is introduced as a flexible, generic, and efficient 3D video format that can unify all others and serve as universal 3D video format in the future
This paper presents results for full and mixed resolution stereo video coding including subjective and objective evaluation for 3DTV on Mobile devices. For this, objective as well as subjective tests have been carried out with different sequences at different image sizes and evaluated on two different stereoscopic displays. The subjective tests showed, that for uncoded sequences full resolution was rated better, however for coded sequences at low bit rates mixed resolution was rated better. An unsharp masking algorithm for up-sampling the lower resolution view only partially improved the overall quality because coding artifacts were strengthened as well. Objective tests showed that the optimum bit rate distribution for mixed resolution stereo video coding is 30% to 35% of the total bit rate for the lower resolution view (half horizontal and half vertical). Finally, tests showed that mixed resolution stereo video decoding with up-sampling is less complex than decoding full resolution stereo video which is important for implementation on mobile devices
Free viewpoint video provides the possibility to freely navigate within dynamic real world video scenes by choosing arbitrary viewpoints and view directions. So far, related work only considered free viewpoint video extraction, representation, and rendering methods. Compression and transmission has not yet been studied in detail and combined with the other components into one complete system. In this paper, we present such a complete system for efficient free viewpoint video extraction, representation, coding, and interactive rendering. Data representation is based on 3D mesh models and view-dependent texture mapping using video textures. The geometry extraction is based on a shape-from-silhouette algorithm. The resulting voxel models are converted into 3D meshes that are coded using MPEG-4 SNHC tools. The corresponding video textures are coded using an H.264/AVC codec. Our algorithms for view-dependent texture mapping have been adopted as an extension of MPEG-4 AFX. The presented results illustrate that based on the proposed methods a complete transmission system for efficient free viewpoint video can be built
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