INTERNATIONAL ORGANISATION FOR STANDARDISATION
ORGANISATION INTERNATIONALE DE NORMALISATION
ISO/IEC JTC1/SC29/WG11
CODING OF MOVING PICTURES AND ASSOCIATED AUDIO
ISO/IEC JTC1/SC29/WG11
N0500
16 July 1993
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Source:
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ISO/IEC JTC1/SC29/WG11 |
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Title:
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Press Release -- MPEG New York Meeting |
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Status: |
For immediate release |
Summary
This
week in New York, at a meeting hosted by Columbia University, the Moving Picture
Experts Group (MPEG) completed definition of MPEG-2 Video, MPEG-2 Audio, and
MPEG-2 Systems. MPEG therefore
confirmed that it is on schedule to produce, by November 1993, Committee Drafts
of all three parts of the MPEG-2 Standard, for balloting by its member countries.
To
ensure that a harmonized solution to the widest range of applications is
achieved, MPEG, an ISO/IEC working group designated ISO/IEC JTC1/SC29/WG11, is
working jointly with the ITU-TS Study Group 15 "Experts Group for ATM Video
Coding." MPEG also collaborates with representatives from other parts of
ITU-TS, and from EBU, ITU-RS, SMPTE, and the North American HDTV community.
MPEG-2 Video
MPEG
is developing the MPEG-2 Video Standard, which specifies the coded bit stream
for high-quality digital video. As
a compatible extension, MPEG-2 Video builds on the completed MPEG-1 Video
Standard (ISO/IEC IS 11172-2), by supporting interlaced video formats and a
number of other advanced features, including features to support HDTV.
As
a generic International Standard, MPEG-2 Video is being defined in terms of
extensible profiles, each of which will support the features needed by an
important class of applications. At the March MPEG meeting in Sydney, the MPEG-2
Main Profile was defined to support digital video transmission in the range of
about 2 to 15 Mbits/sec over cable, satellite, and other broadcast channels, as
well as for Digital Storage Media (DSM) and other communications applications.Building
on this success at this week's New York meeting, MPEG experts from participating
countries in Asia, Australia, Europe, and North America further defined
parameters of the Main Profile and Simple Profile suitable for supporting HDTV
formats.
This
week the MPEG experts also extended the features of the Main Profile by defining
a hierarchical/scalable profile. This
profile aims to support applications such as compatible terrestrial TV/HDTV,
packet-network video systems, backward-compatibility with existing standards
(MPEG-1 and H.261), and other applications for which multi-level coding is
required. For example, such a
system could give the consumer the option of using either a small portable
receiver to decode standard definition TV, or a larger fixed receiver to decode
HDTV from the same broadcast signal.
This
week's accomplishments in New York mean that the technical definition of MPEG-2
Video has been completed. This was
a critical milestone, and shows that MPEG-2 Video is on schedule for a Committee
Draft in November.
MPEG-2 Audio
MPEG
is developing the MPEG-2 Audio Standard for low bitrate coding of multichannel
audio. MPEG-2 Audio coding will supply up to five full bandwidth channels (left,
right, center, and two surround channels), plus an additional low frequency
enhancement channel, and/or up to seven commentary/multilingual channels. The
MPEG-2 Audio Standard will also extend the stereo and mono coding of the MPEG-1
Audio Standard (ISO/IEC IS 11172-3) to half sampling-rates (16 kHz, 22.05 kHz,
and 24 kHz), for improved quality for bitrates at or below 64 kbits/s, per
channel.
This
week in New York, MPEG produced an updated version of the MPEG-2 Audio Working
Draft, and is on track for achieving a Committee Draft specification by the
November MPEG meeting.
The
MPEG-2 Audio multichannel coding Standard will provide backward-compatibility
with the existing MPEG-1 Audio Standard (ISO/IEC IS 11172-3). Together with
ITU-RS, MPEG is organizing formal subjective testing of the proposed MPEG-2
multichannel audio codecs and up to three non-backward-compatible (NBC) codecs.
The NBC codecs are included in order to determine whether an NBC mode should be
introduced as an addendum to the standard. If the results show clear evidence
that an NBC mode improves the performance, a formal call for NBC proposals will
be issued by MPEG, with a view to incorporate these features in the audio syntax.
MPEG-2 Systems
MPEG
is developing the MPEG-2 Systems Standard to specify coding formats for
multiplexing audio, video, and other data into a form suitable for transmission
or storage. There are two data stream formats defined: the Transport Stream,
which can carry multiple programs simultaneously, and which is optimized for use
in applications where data loss may be likely, and the Program stream, which is
optimized for multimedia applications, for performing systems processing in
software, and for MPEG-1 compatibility.
Both
streams are designed to support a large number of known and anticipated
applications, and they retain a significant amount of flexibility such as may be
required for such applications, while providing interoperability between
different device implementations. The
Transport Stream is well suited for transmission of digital television and video
telephony over fiber, satellite, cable, ISDN, ATM, and other networks, and also
for storage on digital video tape and other devices.
It is expected to find widespread use for such applications in the very
near future.
The Program Stream is similar to the MPEG-1 Systems standard (ISO/IEC 11172-1). It includes extensions to support new and future applications. Both the Transport Stream and Program Stream are built on a common Packetized Elementary Stream packet structure, facilitating common video and audio decoder implementations and stream type conversions. This is well-suited for use over a wide variety of networks with ATM/AAL and alternative transports.
This
week in New York, MPEG completed definitions of the features, syntax, and
semantics of the Transport and Program Streams, enabling product designers to
proceed. Among other items, the
Transport Stream packet length was fixed at 188 bytes, including the 4-byte
header. This length is suited for
use with ATM networks, as well as a wide variety of other transmission and
storage systems.
MPEG-4
Work
on a new MPEG initiative for very low bitrate coding of audiovisual programs has
been approved by unanimous ballot of all national bodies of ISO/IEC JTC1. This
work will begin officially at the next MPEG meeting in Brussels in September
1993. It isscheduled to result in a
draft specification in 1997.
This
work will require the development of fundamentally new algorithmic techniques.
In conjunction with the MPEG meeting this week in New York, a one-day
seminar was held on current research ideas applicable to low bitrate coding.
Demonstrations and papers were presented on a number of techniques,
including model-based image coding, human interaction with multimedia
environments, and low-bitrate speech coding.
When completed, the MPEG-4 standard will enable a whole spectrum of new applications, including interactive mobile multimedia communications.