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The sphere-to-plane projection of 360-degree video introduces substantial stretched redundant data, which is discarded when reprojected to the 3D sphere for display. Consequently, encoding and transmitting such redundant data is unnecessary. Highly redundant blocks can be referred to as all-zero blocks (AZBs). Detecting these AZBs in advance can reduce computational and transmission resource consumption. However, this cannot be achieved by existing AZB detection techniques due to the unawareness of the stretching redundancy. In this paper, we first derive a latitude-adaptive redundancy detection (LARD) approach to adaptively detect coefficients carrying redundancy in transformed blocks by modeling the dependency between valid frequency range and the stretching degree based on spectrum analysis. Utilizing LARD, a latitude-redundancy-aware AZB detection scheme tailored for fast 360-degree video coding (LRAS) is proposed to accelerate the encoding process. LRAS consists of three sequential stages: latitude-adaptive AZB (L-AZB) detection, latitude-adaptive genuine-AZB (LG-AZB) detection and latitude-adaptive pseudo-AZB (LP-AZB) detection. Specifically, L-AZB refers to the AZB introduced by projection. LARD is used to detect L-AZB directly. LG-AZB refers to the AZB after hard-decision quantization and zeroing redundant coefficients. A novel latitude-adaptive sum of absolute difference estimation model is built to derive the threshold for LG-AZB detection. LP-AZB refers to the AZB in terms of rate-distortion optimization considering redundancy. A latitude-adaptive rate-distortion model is established for LP-AZB detection. Experimental results show that LRAS can achieve an average total encoding time reduction of 25.85% and 20.38% under low-delay and random access configurations compared to the original HEVC encoder, with only 0.16% and 0.13% BDBR increases and 0.01dB BDPSNR loss, respectively. The transform and quantization time savings are 60.13% and 59.94% on average.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/TIP.2024.3482172 | DOI Listing |
JMIR Form Res
August 2025
School of Nursing and Health Sciences, Hong Kong Metropolitan University, 11th Floor, Jockey Club Institute of Healthcare, 1 Sheung Shing Street, Homantin, Kowloon, Hong Kong, 852, China, 852 39702944.
Background: Older adults may experience chronic pain as they age, which can affect their physical and psychological well-being. Virtual reality (VR) is emerging as a novel and nonpharmacological intervention that offers pain relief and mood enhancement through immersive experiences. However, the feasibility and effectiveness of using nonlocalized and commercial VR applications for chronic pain relief and mood enhancement among community-dwelling older adults remain underexplored.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFStud Health Technol Inform
August 2025
Osaka Metropolitan University, Graduate School of Informatics, Japan.
This study explores the use of a 360-degree camera and a wearable camera to enhance information sharing in home-visit nursing. The 360-degree camera allowed flexible post-production review but had blind spots and required extensive editing. The wearable camera provided a dynamic perspective but suffered from unstable footage and a limited field of view.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFStud Health Technol Inform
August 2025
Telemedicine Development Center of Asia, Kyushu University Hospital, Fukuoka, Japan.
Healthcare disparities in Asia are severe, and doctor-to-doctor (D-to-D) telemedicine conferences/consultations are effective in reducing the gap in knowledge and skills among medical staff. With the growing need to implement online learning in medical institutions in Asia, training programs for information technology technicians and medical staff are needed to conduct such activities. However, the target activities, skills, and other training requirements remain unknown.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ R Soc N Z
June 2025
School of Engineering and Computer Science, Victoria University of Wellington, Wellington, New Zealand.
Recently, 360-degree visual tracking has become increasingly important in 360-degree video processing technology. Although visual tracking technology in 2D videos has gradually matured, there is no universal method for visual tracking in 360-degree videos that can effectively address image stretching and object deformation caused by the equirectangular representation of 360-degree images. In this paper, we propose a two-part method for 360-degree visual tracking.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Vis Exp
June 2025
University Institute for Computer Research, University of Alicante.
The ability to create photorealistic 3D reconstructions of real-world environments from standard color images has numerous applications in fields such as healthcare, education, and industry. This paper presents a novel system that integrates advanced techniques such as structure from motion, incremental scene registration, and Gaussian Splatting to reconstruct detailed 3D models. These models are seamlessly integrated into virtual reality environments to enable immersive interaction.
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