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Effect of Delivery Latency, Feedback Frequency and Network Load on Adaptive Multimedia Streaming
Dublin, Ireland October 15-October 18
DOI Bookmark: http://doi.ieeecomputersociety.org/10.1109/LCN.2007.1832nd IEEE Conference on Local Compute ...
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Gabriel-Miro Muntean, Dublin City University, Ireland
As video on demand systems gain popularity, it seems likely that the desire to serve a high number of customers from limited network resources could lead to a degradation of the endusers? perceived quality. Quality-Oriented Adaptation Scheme (QOAS) balances the need for high quality with increased network utilization when streaming multimedia. QOAS requires client-side monitoring of some transmission-related parameters, grading of the end-user?s quality and feedback that informs the server about the received quality. In response to this feedback, the server adjusts the streaming process in order to maximize the end-user perceived quality in the current conditions. This paper studies the effect of delivery latency and feedback frequency on quality-oriented adaptive multimedia streaming. It also shows how high end-user perceived quality is maintained in the presence of different types of background traffic while recording a significant increase in link utilization and a very low loss rate.
Index Terms:
Adaptive video streaming, grading scheme, end-user perceived quality.
Citation:
Gabriel-Miro Muntean, "Effect of Delivery Latency, Feedback Frequency and Network Load on Adaptive Multimedia Streaming," lcn, pp.421-427, 32nd IEEE Conference on Local Computer Networks (LCN 2007), 2007
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