Variable-size Symmetry-based Graph Fourier Transforms for image compression
This work addresses the problem of computational cost and data dependency in transform design for image and video compression, offering an incremental improvement over current standards.
The paper tackles the challenge of integrating efficient, non-separable transforms into image compression by proposing variable-size Symmetry-based Graph Fourier Transforms (SBGFTs), which achieve a 6.23% bit rate saving over existing transforms in VVC intra-coding with minimal complexity increase.
Modern compression systems use linear transformations in their encoding and decoding processes, with transforms providing compact signal representations. While multiple data-dependent transforms for image/video coding can adapt to diverse statistical characteristics, assembling large datasets to learn each transform is challenging. Also, the resulting transforms typically lack fast implementation, leading to significant computational costs. Thus, despite many papers proposing new transform families, the most recent compression standards predominantly use traditional separable sinusoidal transforms. This paper proposes integrating a new family of Symmetry-based Graph Fourier Transforms (SBGFTs) of variable sizes into a coding framework, focusing on the extension from our previously introduced 8x8 SBGFTs to the general case of NxN grids. SBGFTs are non-separable transforms that achieve sparse signal representation while maintaining low computational complexity thanks to their symmetry properties. Their design is based on our proposed algorithm, which generates symmetric graphs on the grid by adding specific symmetrical connections between nodes and does not require any data-dependent adaptation. Furthermore, for video intra-frame coding, we exploit the correlations between optimal graphs and prediction modes to reduce the cardinality of the transform sets, thus proposing a low-complexity framework. Experiments show that SBGFTs outperform the primary transforms integrated in the explicit Multiple Transform Selection (MTS) used in the latest VVC intra-coding, providing a bit rate saving percentage of 6.23%, with only a marginal increase in average complexity. A MATLAB implementation of the proposed algorithm is available online at [1].