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Efficient Live Video Streaming for Wireless Multihop Networks
PhD Thesis Proposal Defence
Title: "Efficient Live Video Streaming for Wireless Multihop Networks"
by
Mr. Bo ZHANG
Abstract:
With advances in networking, storage and processing capabilities, mobile
devices can now share videos with each other. In this thesis proposal, we
study how to achieve efficient live streaming among cooperative wireless
devices. In such a mobile peer-to-peer (P2P) streaming network, mobile
stations (MSs) relay their received packets in a multi-hop manner by means
of broadcasting using a secondary channel (such as Wi-Fi or Bluetooth).
Such network greatly increases network scalability by multiplying its
available bandwidth, extends its coverage and improves its recovery
efficiency.
The design of the broadcast overlay is crucial to streaming efficiency in
terms of achievable streaming rate. We hence propose a novel overlay
called LocalTree which seeks to minimize the total network traffic while
covering all the clients. LocalTree takes advantage of stable clusters of
MSs to construct streaming overlay. It combines the strengths of both
structured and unstructured overlay designs, and is simple and effective.
We next investigate live free viewpoint video (FVV) streaming in a
wireless cooperative multihop network. An FVV is composed of a large
number of camera-captured anchor views, with virtual views (not captured
by any camera) rendered from their nearby anchors using techniques such as
depth-image-based rendering (DIBR). Given limited wireless bandwidth at
the MSs, we seek to maximize the received video quality (i.e., minimize
distortion). We propose a distributed algorithm called PAFV (Peer-Assisted
Freeview Video), which achieves scalability and high video quality.
Packet loss is inevitable in wireless video streaming due to dynamic
channel condition. To address this, we finally study P2P cooperative error
recovery for video broadcasting. In our system, an MS may generate some
parity packets and share them to its neighbors. An important problem is to
minimize the total number of parity packets generated while achieving a
certain residual loss rate. We propose BOPPER (Broadcast-based P2P Error
Recovery), a novel and fully distributed algorithm to achieve low residual
loss.
Date: Friday, 18 March 2016
Time: 10:30am - 12:30pm
Venue: Room 3588
(lifts 27/28)
Committee Members: Prof. Gary Chan (Supervisor)
Prof. Cunsheng Ding (Chairperson)
Dr. Jogesh Muppala
Dr. Wei Wang
**** ALL are Welcome ****