CVAIMar 25, 2024

Impact of Video Compression Artifacts on Fisheye Camera Visual Perception Tasks

arXiv:2403.16338v12 citationsh-index: 402024 IEEE/CVF Conference on Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition Workshops (CVPRW)
Originality Synthesis-oriented
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This addresses the need to reduce data storage costs for autonomous vehicles without degrading perception performance, but it is incremental as it builds on existing compression methods for a specific camera type.

The paper tackles the problem of how lossy video compression artifacts affect perception tasks for fisheye cameras in autonomous driving, finding that the acceptable compression level varies by dataset and temporal prediction, with negligible impact achievable under certain conditions.

Autonomous driving systems require extensive data collection schemes to cover the diverse scenarios needed for building a robust and safe system. The data volumes are in the order of Exabytes and have to be stored for a long period of time (i.e., more than 10 years of the vehicle's life cycle). Lossless compression doesn't provide sufficient compression ratios, hence, lossy video compression has been explored. It is essential to prove that lossy video compression artifacts do not impact the performance of the perception algorithms. However, there is limited work in this area to provide a solid conclusion. In particular, there is no such work for fisheye cameras, which have high radial distortion and where compression may have higher artifacts. Fisheye cameras are commonly used in automotive systems for 3D object detection task. In this work, we provide the first analysis of the impact of standard video compression codecs on wide FOV fisheye camera images. We demonstrate that the achievable compression with negligible impact depends on the dataset and temporal prediction of the video codec. We propose a radial distortion-aware zonal metric to evaluate the performance of artifacts in fisheye images. In addition, we present a novel method for estimating affine mode parameters of the latest VVC codec, and suggest some areas for improvement in video codecs for the application to fisheye imagery.

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