default search action
Signal Processing: Image Communication, Volume 9
Volume 9, Number 1, November 1996
- Gary S. D. Farrow, Costas S. Xydeas, John P. Oakley, A. Khorabi, Nuria González-Prelcic:
A comparison of system architectures for intelligent document understanding. 1-19 - Jeffrey S. McVeigh, Mel W. Siegel, Angel G. Jordan:
Intermediate view synthesis considering occluded and ambiguously referenced image regions. 21-28 - S.-M. Kruse:
Scene segmentation from dense displacement vector fields using randomized Hough transform. 29-41 - Jong-Il Park, Choong Woong Lee:
Robust estimation of camera parameters from image sequence for video composition. 43-53 - Fernando Pereira, Rob Koenen:
Very low bit-rate audio-visual applications. 55-77 - Raffi Dionysian, Milos D. Ercegovac:
Vector quantization with compressed codebooks. 79-88
Volume 9, Number 2, January 1997
- Gerald Heckner:
Redundancy reducing coding of moving object shapes. 91-98 - I-Wen Tsai, Chung-Lin Huang:
Hybrid cell loss concealment methods for MPEG-II-based packet video. 99-124 - Sotiris Malassiotis, Michael G. Strintzis:
Coding of video-conference stereo image sequences using 3D models. 125-135 - Ingvil Hovig, Simen Gaure:
Consequences of pixel precision for compression rate and measurement. 137-142 - Konstantinos N. Plataniotis, Dimitri Androutsos, Anastasios N. Venetsanopoulos:
Multichannel filters for image processing. 143-158 - Keang-Po Ho, Joseph M. Kahn:
Image transmission over noisy channels using multicarrier modulation. 159-169
Volume 9, Number 3, March 1997
- M. Nakajima, J. Robinson, A. Clark:
Editorial. 173-174 - Geovanni Martínez:
Shape estimation of articulated 3D objects for object-based analysis-synthesis coding (OBASC). 175-199 - Markus Kampmann, Jörn Ostermann:
Automatic adaptation of a face model in a layered coder with an object-based analysis-synthesis layer and a knowledge-based layer. 201-220 - Stathis Panis, Manfred Ziegler, John Paul Cosmas:
The use of stereo and motion in a generic object-based coder. 221-238 - J. R. Brückner, W. Lu, Michael Paul Gough:
Object-oriented coding for efficient transmission of space-acquired image data. 239-247 - P. Robert Hsu, T. Sumitomo, Hiroshi Harashima:
Tube-based video coding. 249-266 - Masayuki Nakajima, Seiichi Saruta, Hiroki Takahashi:
Hair image generating algorithm using fractional hair model. 267-273 - Tadahiko Kimoto, Yasuhiko Yasuda:
Shape description and representation by ellipsoids. 275-290
Volume 9, Number 4, May 1997
- Fernando Pereira, Kevin O'Connell, Rob Koenen, Minoru Etoh:
MPEG-4, part 1: Invited papers. 291-294 - Rob Koenen, Fernando Pereira, Leonardo Chiariglione:
MPEG-4: Context and objectives. 295-304 - Thierry Alpert, Vittorio Baroncini, D. Choi, Laura Contin, Rob Koenen, Fernando Pereira, H. Peterson:
Subjective evaluation of MPEG-4 video codec proposals: Methodological approach and test procedures. 305-325 - Laura Contin, Bernd Edler, D. Meares, P. Schreiner:
Tests on MPEG-4 audio codec proposals. 327-342 - Jörn Ostermann:
Methodologies used for evaluation of video tools and algorithms in MPEG-4. 343-365 - Touradj Ebrahimi:
MPEG-4 video verification model: A video encoding/decoding algorithm based on content representation. 367-384 - Olivier Avaro, Philip A. Chou, Alexandros Eleftheriadis, Carsten Herpel, Cliff Reader, Julien Signès:
The MPEG-4 systems and description languages: A way ahead in audio visual information representation. 385-431 - Peter K. Doenges, Tolga K. Capin, Fabio Lavagetto, Jörn Ostermann, Igor S. Pandzic, Eric Petajan:
MPEG-4: Audio/video and synthetic graphics/audio for mixed media. 433-463 - Barry G. Haskell:
Where for art thou MPEG-4? 465 - Cliff Reader:
What MPEG-4 means to me. 467 - Dimitris Anastassiou:
What does MPEG-4 mean to me. 469 - Hiroshi Yasuda:
Step to creation. 471 - Murat Kunt:
What MPEG-4 means to me. 473 - Richard Schaphorst:
"What does MPEG-4 mean to me". 475-476 - Sakae Okubo:
What does MPEG-4 mean to me. 477
manage site settings
To protect your privacy, all features that rely on external API calls from your browser are turned off by default. You need to opt-in for them to become active. All settings here will be stored as cookies with your web browser. For more information see our F.A.Q.