This article is part of the series Nonlinear Signal and Image Processing – Part I.

Open Access Research Article

Temporal Resolution Enhancement in Compressed Video Sequences

Mark A Robertson* and Robert L Stevenson

Author Affiliations

Laboratory for Image and Signal Analysis (LISA), University of Notre Dame, Notre Dame, IN 46556, USA

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EURASIP Journal on Advances in Signal Processing 2001, 2001:503604  doi:10.1155/S1110865701000269


The electronic version of this article is the complete one and can be found online at:


Received: 27 July 2001
Revisions received: 27 September 2001

© 2001 Robertson and Stevenson

Compressed video may possess a number of artifacts, both spatial and temporal. Spatial compression artifacts arise as a result of quantization of the transform-domain coefficients, and are often manifested as blocking and ringing artifacts. Temporal limitations in compressed video occur when the encoder, in an effort to reduce bandwidth, drops frames. Omitting frames decreases the reconstructed frame rate, which can cause motion to appear jerky and uneven. This paper discusses a method to increase the frame rate of video compressed with the DCT by inserting images between received frames of the sequence. The Bayesian formulation of the restoration prevents spatial compression artifacts in the received frames from propagating to the reconstructed frames.

Keywords:
temporal interpolation; DCT quantization noise; compressed video; postprocessing

Research Article