Paper
30 October 1975 A CAQ Bandwidth Reduction System For RPV Video Transmission
James J. Pearson
Author Affiliations +
Abstract
A bandwidth compression system for the transmission of video images from remotely piloted vehicles has been built and demonstrated. Novel features of this system are the use of the Constant Area Quantization (CAQ) technique to obtain spatial bit rate reduction of 6:1 and a rugged and compact scan convertor, based on a core memory, to accommodate temporal frame rate reduction. Based on the ability of the human eye to perceive more detail in high contrast regions than in low, the CAQ method transmits higher resolution in the former areas. The original six-bit digitized video is converted to a three level signal by the quanti-zing circuit and then Huffman - encoded to exploit its statistical properties and reduce it further to one-bit per pixel. These circuits operate on one line of the picture at a time, and can handle information at full video (10 MHz) rate. The compressed information when received on the ground is stored in coded form in a two-frame (500,000 bit) digital core memory. One frame of the memory is filled while the other is being displayed and then the two are interchanged. Decoding and reconstruction of the video are performed between the memory and the display.
© (1975) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
James J. Pearson "A CAQ Bandwidth Reduction System For RPV Video Transmission", Proc. SPIE 0066, Efficient Transmission of Pictorial Information, (30 October 1975); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.965353
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CITATIONS
Cited by 3 scholarly publications.
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KEYWORDS
Video

Computer programming

Image compression

Unmanned aerial vehicles

Video compression

Cameras

Analog electronics

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