the center of the pictures. The data that are finally
displayed are labeled with “Displayed with CR”. As
it can be seen, with CR only the center of the im-
ages is retrieved with a higher quality (in this case,
with 1 quality layer) and therefore, for a given bit-
rate, CR reconstructions should be better than without
CR from a SNR and from a visual point of view.
4 EVALUATION
This proposal has been tested with two different low-
motion image sequences. The first one is composed
by a set of 140 4Kx4K-resolution SDO/AIA images
taken in the 17.1 nm channel (to show the finest struc-
ture and the one that is most dominated by Fe IX/X
emission from 10
6
K hot plasma), which has been
log10-valued-scaled and corrected for exposure time
variations. The second sequence
3
is composed by the
CIF (352x288 pixels) color (although only the luma
component has been used in our experiments) images
of the Akiyo sequence. This sequence includes a static
background and foreground with very little motion,
only a head-and-shoulder video of an almost static
announcer. The encoding parameters for SDO/AIA
sequence has been: P = 128, Q = 8 and R = 8; and
P = 32, Q = 8 and R = 3 for the Akiyo sequence. Ex-
perimentally, a good value for the threshold param-
eter λ was found to be 1. The reconstruction of the
SDO images has been performed with a resolution
of 1024x1024 pixels because this is the largest size
that most actual displays can show of a power-of-two-
resolution-scaled 4Kx4K image. In the case of Akiyo,
no scaling has been applied.
The transmission of the SDO/AIA sequence has
been simulated using a bit-rate of 27×10
6
bits/second
(see the top plot of Figure 3). Although lower
band-widths have been tested, the refreshing-rate (25
frames/second) of the precincts generated by the CR
procedure is too slow to represent all the motion that
the rotation movement of the Sun generates in the im-
ages. Nevertheless, a bit-rate of 8 × 10
5
bits/second
has been enough to generate good reconstructions for
the Akiyo sequence (see the bottom plot of Figure 3).
A visual comparison can be done using Figure 4
and 5 that shows the reconstruction of the second im-
age of the SDO/AIA sequence and the fourth image
of the Akiyo sequence, respectively. In these exper-
iments, much smaller bit-rates (1163400 bits/second
for SDO/AIA and 343800 bits/second for Akiyo)
have been used in order to generate large visual dif-
ferences between using CR and not. A frame-rate of
3
Downloadable from http://trace.eas.asu.edu/yuv/akiyo/
akiyo qcif.7z.
25 images/seconds has been considered for both se-
quences.
5 CONCLUSIONS
This work shows how to improve the remote visu-
alization of JPEG 2000 image sequences by means
of client-driven conditional replenishment. The pro-
posed system is fully compatible with the JPIP stan-
dard because we only havechangedthe order in which
the packets are retrieved from the server. With the
idea of improving the quality of the reconstruction of
sequences with a higher degree of movement, motion
compensated predictions could be generated by the
clients. In any respect, this modification of the tested
algorithm does not affect the applicability of our pro-
posal.
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TRANSMISSION OF LOW-MOTION JPEG2000 IMAGE SEQUENCES USING CLIENT-DRIVEN CONDITIONAL
REPLENISHMENT
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