Layered Coding for Mobile Cloud Gaming Using Scalable Blinn-Phong Lighting

In a mobile cloud gaming, high-quality, high-frame-rate game images of immense data size need to be delivered to the clients over wireless networks under stringent delay requirement. For good gaming experience, reducing the transmission bit rate of the game images is necessary. Most existing cloud g...

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Veröffentlicht in:IEEE transactions on image processing 2016-07, Vol.25 (7), p.3112-3125
Hauptverfasser: Chuah, Seong-Ping, Cheung, Ngai-Man, Yuen, Chau
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:In a mobile cloud gaming, high-quality, high-frame-rate game images of immense data size need to be delivered to the clients over wireless networks under stringent delay requirement. For good gaming experience, reducing the transmission bit rate of the game images is necessary. Most existing cloud gaming platforms simply employ standard, off-the-shelf video codecs for game image compression. In this paper, we propose the layered coding scheme to reduce transmission bandwidth and latency. We leverage the rendering computation of modern mobile devices to render a low-quality local game image, or the base layer (BL). Instead of sending a high-quality game image, cloud servers can send enhancement layer information, which clients can utilize to improve the quality of the BL. Central to the layered coding scheme is the design of a complexity-scalable BL rendering pipeline that can be executed on a range of power-constrained mobile devices. In this paper, we focus on the lighting stage in modern graphics rendering and propose a method to scale the popular Blinn-Phong lighting for the use in BL rendering. We derive an information-theoretic model on the Blinn-Phong lighting to estimate the rendered image entropy. The analytic model informs the optimal BL rendering design that can lead to maximum bandwidth saving subject to the constraint on the computation capability of the client. We show that the information rate of the enhancement layer could be much less than that of the high-quality game image, while the BL can be generated with only a very small amount of computation. Experiment results suggest that our analytic model is accurate in estimating. For layered coding scheme, up to 84% reduction in bandwidth usage can be achieved by sending the enhancement layer information instead of the original high-quality game images compressed by H.264/AVC.
ISSN:1057-7149
1941-0042
DOI:10.1109/TIP.2016.2565259