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Complexity analysis of next-generation HEVC decoder
46
Citations
7
References
2012
Year
Unknown Venue
Complexity AnalysisEngineeringMultimedia Signal ProcessingHevc Video DecoderVideo Coding FormatComputer EngineeringIterative DecodingHevc ContentComputational ComplexityDuo ProcessorData CompressionSignal ProcessingComplexity
This paper analyzes the complexity of the HEVC video decoder being developed by the JCT-VC community. The HEVC reference decoder HM 3.1 is profiled with Intel VTune on Intel Core 2 Duo processor. The analysis covers both Low Complexity (LC) and High Efficiency (HE) settings for resolutions varying from WQVGA (416 × 240 pixels) up to 1600p (2560 × 1600 pixels). The yielded cycle-accurate results are compared with the respective results of H.264/AVC Baseline Profile (BP) and High Profile (HiP) reference decoders. HEVC offers significant improvement in compression efficiency over H.264/AVC: the average BD-rate saving of LC is around 51% over BP whereas the BD-rate gain of HE is around 45% over HiP. However, the average decoding complexities of LC and HE are increased by 61% and 87% over BP and HiP, respectively. In LC, the most complex functions are motion compensation (MC) and loop filtering (LF) that account on average for 50% and 14% of the decoder complexity. The decoding complexity of HE configuration is on average 42% higher than that of the LC configuration. Majority of the difference is caused by extra LF stages. In HE, the complexities of MC and LF are 37% and 32%, respectively. In practice, a standard 3 GHz dual core processor is expected to be able to decode 1080p HEVC content in real-time.
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