In the realm of short video streaming, popular adaptive bitrate (ABR) algorithms developed for classical long video applications suffer from catastrophic failures because they are tuned to solely adapt bitrates. Instead, short video adaptive bitrate (SABR) algorithms have to properly determine which video at which bitrate level together for content prefetching, without sacrificing the users' quality of experience (QoE) and yielding noticeable bandwidth wastage jointly. Unfortunately, existing SABR methods are inevitably entangled with slow convergence and poor generalization. Thus, in this paper, we propose Incendio, a novel SABR framework that applies Multi-Agent Reinforcement Learning (MARL) with Expert Guidance to separate the decision of video ID and video bitrate in respective buffer management and bitrate adaptation agents to maximize the system-level utilized score modeled as a compound function of QoE and bandwidth wastage metrics. To train Incendio, it is first initialized by imitating the hand-crafted expert rules and then fine-tuned through the use of MARL. Results from extensive experiments indicate that Incendio outperforms the current state-of-the-art SABR algorithm with a 53.2% improvement measured by the utility score while maintaining low training complexity and inference time.
Implicit neural representation (INR) characterizes the attributes of a signal as a function of corresponding coordinates which emerges as a sharp weapon for solving inverse problems. However, the expressive power of INR is limited by the spectral bias in the network training. In this paper, we find that such a frequency-related problem could be greatly solved by re-arranging the coordinates of the input signal, for which we propose the disorder-invariant implicit neural representation (DINER) by augmenting a hash-table to a traditional INR backbone. Given discrete signals sharing the same histogram of attributes and different arrangement orders, the hash-table could project the coordinates into the same distribution for which the mapped signal can be better modeled using the subsequent INR network, leading to significantly alleviated spectral bias. Furthermore, the expressive power of the DINER is determined by the width of the hash-table. Different width corresponds to different geometrical elements in the attribute space, \textit{e.g.}, 1D curve, 2D curved-plane and 3D curved-volume when the width is set as $1$, $2$ and $3$, respectively. More covered areas of the geometrical elements result in stronger expressive power. Experiments not only reveal the generalization of the DINER for different INR backbones (MLP vs. SIREN) and various tasks (image/video representation, phase retrieval, refractive index recovery, and neural radiance field optimization) but also show the superiority over the state-of-the-art algorithms both in quality and speed. \textit{Project page:} \url{https://ezio77.github.io/DINER-website/}
This work extends the multiscale structure originally developed for point cloud geometry compression to point cloud attribute compression. To losslessly encode the attribute while maintaining a low bitrate, accurate probability prediction is critical. With this aim, we extensively exploit cross-scale, cross-group, and cross-color correlations of point cloud attribute to ensure accurate probability estimation and thus high coding efficiency. Specifically, we first generate multiscale attribute tensors through average pooling, by which, for any two consecutive scales, the decoded lower-scale attribute can be used to estimate the attribute probability in the current scale in one shot. Additionally, in each scale, we perform the probability estimation group-wisely following a predefined grouping pattern. In this way, both cross-scale and (same-scale) cross-group correlations are exploited jointly. Furthermore, cross-color redundancy is removed by allowing inter-color processing for YCoCg/RGB alike multi-channel attributes. The proposed method not only demonstrates state-of-the-art compression efficiency with significant performance gains over the latest G-PCC on various contents but also sustains low complexity with affordable encoding and decoding runtime.
We consider the problem of lossy image compression, a fundamental problem in both information theory and many real-world applications. We begin by reviewing the relationship between variational autoencoders (VAEs), a powerful class of deep generative models, and rate-distortion theory, the theoretical foundation for lossy compression. By combining the ResNet VAE architecture and techniques including test-time quantization and quantization-aware training, we present a quantization-aware ResNet VAE (QARV) framework for lossy image compression. For sake of practical usage, we propose a new neural network architecture for fast decoding, and we introduce an adaptive normalization operation for variable-rate coding. QARV employs a hierarchical progressive coding structure, supports continuously variable-rate compression with fast entropy coding, and gives a better rate-distortion efficiency than existing baseline methods. Code is made publicly available at https://github.com/duanzhiihao/lossy-vae
This work extends the Multiscale Sparse Representation (MSR) framework developed for static Point Cloud Geometry Compression (PCGC) to support the dynamic PCGC through the use of multiscale inter conditional coding. To this end, the reconstruction of the preceding Point Cloud Geometry (PCG) frame is progressively downscaled to generate multiscale temporal priors which are then scale-wise transferred and integrated with lower-scale spatial priors from the same frame to form the contextual information to improve occupancy probability approximation when processing the current PCG frame from one scale to another. Following the Common Test Conditions (CTC) defined in the standardization committee, the proposed method presents State-Of-The-Art (SOTA) compression performance, yielding 78% lossy BD-Rate gain to the latest standard-compliant V-PCC and 45% lossless bitrate reduction to the latest G-PCC. Even for recently-emerged learning-based solutions, our method still shows significant performance gains.
Conventional cameras capture image irradiance on a sensor and convert it to RGB images using an image signal processor (ISP). The images can then be used for photography or visual computing tasks in a variety of applications, such as public safety surveillance and autonomous driving. One can argue that since RAW images contain all the captured information, the conversion of RAW to RGB using an ISP is not necessary for visual computing. In this paper, we propose a novel $\rho$-Vision framework to perform high-level semantic understanding and low-level compression using RAW images without the ISP subsystem used for decades. Considering the scarcity of available RAW image datasets, we first develop an unpaired CycleR2R network based on unsupervised CycleGAN to train modular unrolled ISP and inverse ISP (invISP) models using unpaired RAW and RGB images. We can then flexibly generate simulated RAW images (simRAW) using any existing RGB image dataset and finetune different models originally trained for the RGB domain to process real-world camera RAW images. We demonstrate object detection and image compression capabilities in RAW-domain using RAW-domain YOLOv3 and RAW image compressor (RIC) on snapshots from various cameras. Quantitative results reveal that RAW-domain task inference provides better detection accuracy and compression compared to RGB-domain processing. Furthermore, the proposed \r{ho}-Vision generalizes across various camera sensors and different task-specific models. Additional advantages of the proposed $\rho$-Vision that eliminates the ISP are the potential reductions in computations and processing times.
Implicit neural representation (INR) characterizes the attributes of a signal as a function of corresponding coordinates which emerges as a sharp weapon for solving inverse problems. However, the capacity of INR is limited by the spectral bias in the network training. In this paper, we find that such a frequency-related problem could be largely solved by re-arranging the coordinates of the input signal, for which we propose the disorder-invariant implicit neural representation (DINER) by augmenting a hash-table to a traditional INR backbone. Given discrete signals sharing the same histogram of attributes and different arrangement orders, the hash-table could project the coordinates into the same distribution for which the mapped signal can be better modeled using the subsequent INR network, leading to significantly alleviated spectral bias. Experiments not only reveal the generalization of the DINER for different INR backbones (MLP vs. SIREN) and various tasks (image/video representation, phase retrieval, and refractive index recovery) but also show the superiority over the state-of-the-art algorithms both in quality and speed.
Quantizing floating-point neural network to its fixed-point representation is crucial for Learned Image Compression (LIC) because it ensures the decoding consistency for interoperability and reduces space-time complexity for implementation. Existing solutions often have to retrain the network for model quantization which is time consuming and impractical. This work suggests the use of Post-Training Quantization (PTQ) to directly process pretrained, off-the-shelf LIC models. We theoretically prove that minimizing the mean squared error (MSE) in PTQ is sub-optimal for compression task and thus develop a novel Rate-Distortion (R-D) Optimized PTQ (RDO-PTQ) to best retain the compression performance. Such RDO-PTQ just needs to compress few images (e.g., 10) to optimize the transformation of weight, bias, and activation of underlying LIC model from its native 32-bit floating-point (FP32) format to 8-bit fixed-point (INT8) precision for fixed-point inference onwards. Experiments reveal outstanding efficiency of the proposed method on different LICs, showing the closest coding performance to their floating-point counterparts. And, our method is a lightweight and plug-and-play approach without any need of model retraining which is attractive to practitioners.
A learning-based adaptive loop filter is developed for the Geometry-based Point Cloud Compression (G-PCC) standard to reduce attribute compression artifacts. The proposed method first generates multiple Most-Probable Sample Offsets (MPSOs) as potential compression distortion approximations, and then linearly weights them for artifact mitigation. As such, we drive the filtered reconstruction as close to the uncompressed PCA as possible. To this end, we devise a Compression Artifact Reduction Network (CARNet) which consists of two consecutive processing phases: MPSOs derivation and MPSOs combination. The MPSOs derivation uses a two-stream network to model local neighborhood variations from direct spatial embedding and frequency-dependent embedding, where sparse convolutions are utilized to best aggregate information from sparsely and irregularly distributed points. The MPSOs combination is guided by the least square error metric to derive weighting coefficients on the fly to further capture content dynamics of input PCAs. The CARNet is implemented as an in-loop filtering tool of the GPCC, where those linear weighting coefficients are encapsulated into the bitstream with negligible bit rate overhead. Experimental results demonstrate significant improvement over the latest GPCC both subjectively and objectively.
Recent work has shown a strong theoretical connection between variational autoencoders (VAEs) and the rate distortion theory. Motivated by this, we consider the problem of lossy image compression from the perspective of generative modeling. Starting from ResNet VAEs, which are originally designed for data (image) distribution modeling, we redesign their latent variable model using a quantization-aware posterior and prior, enabling easy quantization and entropy coding for image compression. Along with improved neural network blocks, we present a powerful and efficient class of lossy image coders, outperforming previous methods on natural image (lossy) compression. Our model compresses images in a coarse-to-fine fashion and supports parallel encoding and decoding, leading to fast execution on GPUs.