MPEG-21 IN BROADCASTING
role in the digital transition of broadcasting
Itaru Kaneko
Tokyo Polytechnic University
Artur Lugmayr, Seppo Kalli
Digital Media Institute, POB. 553, FIN-33101 Tampere, Finland
Abdellatif Benjelloun Touimi
France Telecom R&D, 2 avenue Pierre Marzin - 22307 Lannion, France
Jong-Nam Kim
Korean Broadcasting System (KBS), Korea
Claudio Alberti
EPFL, Swizerland
Sadigurschi Yona
NDS Technologies, Israel
Jaejoon Kim
Daegu University, Korea
Maria Teresa Andrade
INESC Porto, Campus da FEUP, Rua Roberto Frias 378, 4200-465 Porto, Portugal
Keywords: MPEG-21, broadcasting, dig
ital television, metadata, XML
Abstract: The transition to digital in th
e TV broadcasting industry is already gradually being performed while the
complete digital switchover seems now possible to be accomplished within the near future. This article
describes and analyses this phenomenon and the role of MPEG-21 may play in it. MPEG-21 is the ISO/IEC
standard currently under development in MPEG (ISO/IEC JTC1/SC29/WG11). Unlike preceding MPEG
standards - MPEG-21 does not specify a coding format of the content but rather a set of standards to ease
transactions of multimedia content and the provision of digital multimedia services in heterogeneous
network environments, including broadcast. In this paper, we highlight the role of MPEG-21 in broadcasting,
in particular in the deployment of digital TV services.
1 INTRODUCTION
The use of digital technology in TV broadcasting
enables the provision of increased quality and
functionality and will have a major impact on the
viewing behaviour of consumers. We will describe
those major changes and analyze potential problems
and potential usages of MPEG-21 to help
217
Kaneko I., Lugmayr A., Kalli S., Benjelloun Touimi A., Kim J., Alberti C., Yona S., Kim J. and Teresa Andrade M. (2004).
MPEG-21 IN BROADCASTING role in the digital transition of broadcasting.
In Proceedings of the First International Conference on E-Business and Telecommunication Networks, pages 217-222
DOI: 10.5220/0001385802170222
Copyright
c
SciTePress
broadcasting industry to relax such problems.
MPEG-21 specifies a set of standards to ease
transactions of multimedia content and the provision
of digital multimedia services in heterogeneous
network environments, including broadcast. MPEG-
21 is being designed as a common standard for range
of applications of digital multimedia content and one
of most important applications is digital
broadcasting. Various aspects in digital broadcasting
including networking, events, channels, services,
programs, signalling, encoding, bandwidth,
conditional access, subscription, advertisements and
interactivity, are all covered by MPEG-21, placing it
therefore in a position to framework to be applied in
digital broadcasting.
2 DIGITAL TRANSITION IN
BROADCASTING
2.1 Transition in performance and
platform
Currently there is a clear trend in the market towards
wider range of receiver platforms including mobile
platform and higher definition platform. The sales of
personal digital recording are growing very quickly.
This all lead to the rapid replacement of the basic
tool of subscribing broadcasting service.
2.2 Transition in functionality
Change of platform and performance introduces
several new functionalities. Most widely appreciated
function is time-shifting by personal recording
devices. The combination of electronic program and
personal recording derives great enhancement of
viewing opportunity. Networking functionality is not
very widely used currently, but it might have great
impact if broader bandwidth capable to handle video
will be widely available. For the audio broadcasting,
internet is powerful enough to deliver audio
broadcasting and there are over 1000 internet audio
broadcasting station is US and Europe.
2.3 Transition in viewing behaviour
Interactivity can be provided to the TV viewer in
many different ways. There are two main categories
of iTV programming, unrelated or related to the
scheduled programming. The first is referred to as
“24/7” as it comprises interactive services available
all the time. The second, “enhanced services
includes the provision of alternative camera angles
or feeds during live events, possibility to vote on
contestants in a show or playing with them, but also
additional information related with the normal
programming. These services whilst imposing new
challenges to the TV broadcaster, are already part of
their new business model and are changing the way
viewers behave in front of the TV set. This is being
seen as a personal device, able to satisfy in different
ways their needs, providing them control to decide
the timing and detail to which they watch TV.
3 CHALLANGES FOR MPEG-21 IN
BROADCASTING
3.1 Potential problem
The new digital era in TV broadcasting brought the
multi-channel technology, a considerably larger
number of competing channels combining huge
quantity of archived and new material. TV
broadcasters are seeing themselves confronted with
new challenges and hard competition. In order to be
successful and maintain the loyalty of their audience
or even increase it, broadcasters need to provide
more quality, to offer more choices, to provide
different “flavours” of the same content, to delivery
news fast, to re-distribute content in a differentiated
way, all this across multiple platforms. And in order
to be competitive, they need to do it efficiently
without incurring excessive extra costs.
3.2 Role of MPEG-21
The current workflow in the broadcasting chain is
not adequate to allow re-purposing or re-packaging
the content to support cross-media delivery and
audience-adapted programming. The process is
complicated as it involves many people with
different backgrounds, roles and rights as well as a
large amount of content and metadata coming from
different sources and in different formats. All this
information must be easily accessible to all and its
consistency guaranteed throughout the complete
broadcast workflow. This is where MPEG-21 comes
into play.
4 MPEG-21 OVERVIEW
MPEG-21 is the ISO/IEC standard currently under
development in MPEG (Burnett et al., 2003)
(Bormans, Gelissen and Perkis, 2003). Unlike
preceding MPEG standards, MPEG-21 does not
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focus on the specification of audio-visual
compression formats, but rather on a set of
descriptions to ease transactions of multimedia
content in heterogeneous network environments,
including broadcasting. The standard is currently
divided in 16 parts, from which the ones listed in
Table 1 are considered by the authors as the most
relevant for the work presented in this article.
Table 1: The first seven parts in MPEG-21
Part Title
1 Vision, Technologies and Strategy
2 Digital Item Declaration (DID)
3 Digital Item Identification (DII)
4 Intellectual Property Management and
Protection (IPMP)
5 Rights Expression Language (REL)
6 Rights Data Dictionary (RDD)
7 Digital Item Adaptation (DIA)
The basic concepts of MPEG-21 are the User
and the Digital Item (DI). The User is any type of
content manipulator (e.g. subscriber, producer,
provider, network). The DI corresponds to a
combination of multimedia resources (e.g. MPEG-2
Audio and Video bitstreams) with associated
metadata (e.g. Rights descriptions and/or MPEG-7
Audio and Video descriptors). MPEG-21 builds its
functionality on top of the Digital Item Declaration
(DID, part 2 of the standard), which consists of a
basic model expressed in XML defining the
structure and organisation of DIs. The model
constitutes the foundation to provide higher-level
functionality, enabling identification, description,
handling, monitoring, adaptation and universal usage
of the DI. MPEG-21 tools envisage the provision of
multimedia content and services satisfying the users’
needs and rights in the best possible way given
network, terminal and environment constraints and
in a secure and seamless way. This scope translates
into the well-known concept UMA, the Universal
Multimedia Access. UMA addresses the delivery of
multimedia resources under different and varying
network conditions, diverse terminal equipment
capabilities and user or creator preferences and
needs, while enforcing IPRs and usage rights The
parts of the standard included in Table 1 are the
fundamental vehicles for the effective
implementation of this concept. Digital Rights
Management (DRM) are addressed in parts 4, 5 and
6 - specification of a rights expression language
(part 6 – REL), its corresponding dictionary (part 5 –
RDD) and a DRM architecture allowing
interoperability between the different parts of
MPEG-21 and between different DRM systems (part
4 – IPMP). Eight different DI Adaptation tools are
specified in part 7, each comprising a description
and a resource adaptation engine. These are applied
to the DI in order to seamlessly produce the Adapted
DI to heterogeneous networks and environments,
terminal’s constraints or user preferences (Pereira
and Burnett, 2003) (Perkis et al., 2002) (Fossbakk et
al.,2001). DI Adaptation operations may modify
binary resources or metadata of the input DI or the
declaration of the DI to the usage environment.
5 USE OF MPEG-21 IN
BROADCASTING
MPEG committee acknowledges broadcasting as
one of the most important application of digital
multimedia. Usage scenarios of MPEG-21 in
broadcasting are currently under heavy investigation
incorporated by special ad-hoc group established by
MPEG, named “Ad-hoc group on MPEG-21 in
broadcasting”. The authors of this paper are actively
participating in this activity. This section describes
several of the usage scenarios currently under
investigation.
Figure 1: Digital, Interactive TV value chain
5.1 Digital broadcast item model
(DBIM)
The DBIM represents the model of digital content
for broadcast use (
Figure 1). A typical digital TV
value chain consists of many phases such as
preproduction, production, postproduction and
delivery. The goal is the introduction of a digital
item for broadcasting use – a Digital Broadcast Item
MPEG-21 IN BROADCASTING role in the digital transition of broadcasting
219
(DBI). Each MPEG-21 based DI has an underlying
model describing the behaviour and characteristics
of the item in context. The DBI underlying model is
especially designed for the broadcasting context.
This model is named Digital Broadcast Item Model
(DBIM) (see (Lugmayr et al., 2004)).
The purpose of the DBIM is the harmonization
of several metadata standards as utilized in
broadcasting towards a unified life-cycle and
workflow model. MPEG-21 shall be utilized as
umbrella standard. The DBIM is based on an
MPEG-21 DI especially used in broadcast context
throughout the broadcast value-chain. A DI is used
to communicate between several partners in the
value-chain.
5.2 Interoperable AV clips in
broadcasting
Due to the rapid growth of personal digital recording
and the phenomenon of technology convergence,
interoperable audiovisual clips are being regarded as
one of the most important usage scenarios in
broadcasting. While such clips must be playable on
any existent audiovisual device and medium, the full
exploitation of the service imposes that the rights of
the content owners are adequately managed using
the existing content protection technology.
Concerning increasing new phenomenon in digital
transition, there are also increasing interest for
advanced security models e.g. Multi-Lateral Security
(Kaneko and Shirai 2001) and scalable architecture.
In this context the common representation formats
and the tools to adapt content defined in MPEG-21
parts 4, 5 and 7, may play an essential role and
provide ground for real interoperability among
different DRM technologies. MPEG has been
undertaking great efforts for the standardization of
IPMP mechanisms since 1996, having already
completed the MPEG-2 and MPEG-4 IPMP
specifications. Current work includes the refinement
of requirements for MPEG-21 IPMP and evaluation
of proposals towards the final phase of
standardization. But even if MPEG-21 IPMP is in its
early stages, a closer look at how IPMP works in an
MPEG-4 terminal can be of great help for the
purpose of this paper.
Figure 2 shows a conceptual block diagram of an
MPEG-4 terminal with IPMP Extensions. The
content (left in the figure) contains a data structure
referred to as IPMP Tool List and IPMP Information,
which includes IPMP Tool IDs and Locations. This
information allows terminals to identify and collect
the required IPMP tools that control the access to the
content. Once activated, together with the terminal
elements implementing the IPMP messaging
interfaces, the access to the content is unlocked.
IPM
P
Tools (T1,T2)
retrieved from the
network
T
1
IPMP Tool List
IPMP Information
[ Content ]
Terminal
T
3
T
4
T
2
T
1
T
4
Video, Audio, etc
Figure 2: MPEG-4/IPMP architecture
5.3 Quality of service management
The management of QoS (Quality of Service)
throughout the broadcasting chain, from content
production to end-user consumption is a real issue in
the broadcasting world. The goal is to achieve the
best possible QoS for the end users taking into
account their expectations as well as the technical
capabilities of the terminal and the resources and
technical parameters of the delivery networks. The
main benefit is the provision of end-to-end control
of the QoS delivered to the end user.
As a specific usage scenario, an end user
receives multimedia content through a broadcasting
infrastructure with some guaranteed QoS. The user
may have different types of terminals (Set-Top-Box,
PC, mobile phone, video-game consoles…) and
access over heterogeneous networks, for example
with multi-channel distribution (DVB-T, DVB-S,
DVB-H, UMTS…).
Several description tools provided by MPEG-21
DIA are useful for this purpose. As example
AdaptationQoS description tools are designed
for the adaptation of the audio and video bitstreams
to match the network constraints, especially
bandwidth. Terminal Capabilities are
description tools designed for the adaptation of the
multimedia content to fit the exact characteristics of
the consuming end-user terminal. Such
characteristics could be the number of speakers,
screen size, etc. Other useful descriptors are the
Network characteristics which are
specified in terms of network capabilities and
conditions, including available bandwidth, delay and
error characteristics.
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5.4 Metadata filtering
Manifold data is present throughout the broadcast
value chain and has manifold representation formats.
The relevant data should be preserved and extracted
semi-automatically for commonly known digital TV
services. Examples are the digital TV program
guide; news broadcast show; informational services
or weather forecasts.
Multi-channel application, thus information to be
published through different information channels
relies on the re-use and transformation of existing
data sources (e.g. teletext content is in parallel
published on a web-page).
The key to realize metadata filtering is the re-use
of metadata, template libraries for services and
computer assisted editing are some examples for
how the process can be made easier. The goal of the
ad-hoc group is to introduce metadata filtering as
basic concept to integrate metadata across systems
(see Figure 3).
Figure 3: Metadata filtering
A very specific example in broadcasting is the
management of service information. Service
information describes the content of television
programs. In principle service information is the
basis for an electronic TV program guide,
commonly known as Electronic Program Guide
(EPG). Service information is organized in many
different tables. The data for these tables needs to be
manually edited, maintained, re-edited and extracted
from multiple sources. This implies a simpler
solution to automatically obtain basic information
for the EPG and prepare it for play-out. Metadata
eXchange Forrmat (MXF) and Advanced Authoring
Format (AAF) files are one potential source for the
basic EPG information. Metadata filtering addresses
the catalysis of metadata from different sources. It
also includes the preparation of metadata for play-
out. The term catalysis addresses several metadata
processes, such as metadata transformation,
conversion of metadata, building the content of
metadata files (e.g. through segmentation, data
mining), validation or visualization.
We can distinguish between creation metadata
and consumer metadata. Creation metadata is
metadata typically used in professional broadcast
systems. Examples are MXF, AAF and the P/Meta
initiative. Consumer metadata convolves several
data structures delivered to consumer networks for
further use. Examples are service information
making up the basic information for the Electronic
Program Guide (EPG), TV-Anytime descriptions
and especially MPEG-21 metadata.
6 CONCLUSIONS
Within the scope of this paper we were able to
present a brief description of the MPEG-21 standard
and its potential applications in broadcasting. A few
important usage scenarios have been described to
illustrate such applications.
Currently, many standardization activities aim at
the convergence of various multimedia services
including the broadcasting environment (Table 2).
Among those activities, MPEG may be obligated in
the harmonization of MPEG application in media
convergence.
Table 2: Standardization activity in media convergence
Organization and activity URL
TV-Anytime Forum http://www.tv-anytime.org/
Pro-MPEG:Material
eXchange Format (MXF)
http://www.mxf.org/
SMPTE: SMPTE 360M
General eXchange Format
(GXF)
http://www.smpte.org/smpte_s
tore/standards/
SMPTE: SMPTE 335M
Metadata Dictionary
http://www.smpte.org/smpte_s
tore/standards/
Pro-MPEG: Advanced
Authoring Format (AAF)
http://www.aafassociation.org/
EBU:P/META (Metadata
Exchange Scheme)
http://www.ebu.ch/department
s/technical/pmc/pmc_meta.ht
ml
IEEE: 1484.12.1 - 2002
Learning Object Metadata
(LOM)
http://ltsc.ieee.org/wg12/
Many any other standards for multimedia asset
management are present in the broadcasting industry.
MXF as well as AAF or P/Meta is especially
designed for post-production, while TV-Anytime
focuses on delivery and consumption. But these
metadata specifications are essentially used within
MPEG-21 IN BROADCASTING role in the digital transition of broadcasting
221
the broadcasting environment. One of the strengths
of MPEG-21 is its potential to act as the vehicle to
bridge the existing gap between the two worlds - that
of the broadcasting world where the distinction
between providers or creators and consumers is
rather clear and that of the Internet where consumers
are simultaneously creators. MPEG-21 can cover or
ensure interoperability with the mentioned metadata
standards either by providing directly the required
functionality and tools, or by including references to
those metadata files and enabling their common use.
And in addition, it is possible to take advantage of
all other value delivered by MPEG-21 such as DRM
interoperability or DI adaptation and QoS awareness.
For example, MXF can be mapped via MPEG -21 to
consumer device readable formats such as TV-
Anytime, DVB-HTML or other relevant XML based
formats. The data contained in MXF structures is
preserved as well the process of mapping can be
automated.
The exploration of the use of MPEG-21 in
broadcasting started with finding MPEG-21’s key
features and strengths. In specific content structuring
as e.g. applied in the LOM is currently only
available in production phases due to proprietary
standards (e.g. MXF). MPEG-21 can be specifically
applied in delivery phases and can be seen as
middleware standard for advanced consumer device
architectures. Intelligent middleware architectures
matching low-level resources to high-level demands
from application side are strongly supported by
MPEG-21 and its adaptation and QoS features.
MPEG-21 provides therefore an excellent
solution for solving issues such as QoS management,
IPMP or adaptation in an excellent way and MPEG-
21 already covers much other important area.
Work is continuing to provide firm ground for
the broadcasting industry in digital switchover. In
the near future we will be able to report about more
advanced usage scenarios and their technical
challenges.
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
We would like to thank members of MPEG, in
particular to those participating in the “ad-hoc group
on MPEG-21 in broadcasting”. Without their effort,
this article would not have been possible to be
authored.
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