INTERNATIONAL ORGANISATION FOR STANDARDISATION
ORGANISATION INTERNATIONALE DE NORMALISATION
ISO/IEC JTC1/SC29/WG11
CODING OF MOVING PICTURES AND ASSOCIATED AUDIO
ISO/IEC JTC1/SC29/WG11 N0822
MPEG 94/
11 November 1994
Source: Leonardo Chiariglione - Convenor
Title: Press release
Status: Approved at 29th meeting
The approval of MPEG-2 for publication as an international standard constitutes an important milestone in international standardization that will make possible the establishment of interoperable digital audio-visual services and applications on a world-wide scale while making sure that international standardisation of digital audio-visual matters will not be overtaken by the progression of technology. The continuing work will ensure continued responsiveness to the needs of the digital audio-visual community.
MPEG-2 Systems specifies two syntaxes, the Transport Stream and the Program Stream, each designed for different applications. Both syntaxes offer a wide range of functions and capabilities. In addition to multiplexing, a major feature is the accurate synchronisation of audio, video, and data for correct presentation at the decoder. The standard addresses the management of buffers at the decoder. Additional functions include random access, identification of information carried within the stream, procedures to support user access control, and error protection mechanisms.
Contribution to the development of the MPEG-2 Systems standard has come from many different industry groups, representing the wide range of interest in the standard. ITU-T Study Group 15 has also participated in the development of the standard and the ITU-T will adopt MPEG-2 Systems as ITU-T Recommendation H.222.1, as part of its Broadband-ISDN audio visual telecommunications terminal.
With new transmission technologies allowing high bandwidth connections, and switching technologies such as ATM, MPEG-2 Systems will form the basis of new audio and visual services applications for many years to come.
A requirements document on a multimedia scripting language was also produced. The standard will be developed together with the Multimedia and Hypermedia Experts Group (MHEG), a parallel committee within JTC1/SC29. The language is an important element for the rapid introduction of stand-alone and networked interactive multimedia applications and services.
MPEG-2 Video has been developed jointly with ITU-T SG 15 and will be adopted by that Standards Body as Recommendation H.262.
A first set of results, obtained as early as March through a set of test video sequences, proved that MPEG-2 Video at 9 Mbit/s coding provides near transparent quality while at 6 Mbit/s the quality equals or exceeds that of conventional TV systems. At lower bit rates, such as 4 Mbit/s high quality pictures will be obtained on most picture material.
Expert viewing tests were also carried out on the "Spatially Scalable Profile at H14", a profile for 1440 line HDTV. This profile defines layered coding techniques used to generate a base layer bitstream with an enhancement layer bitstream used to create a higher resolution image. The layered coding allows simultaneous reception of an HDTV signal by both HDTV and standard resolution TV receivers.
Initial results seem to indicate that the high layer satisfies the required quality for HDTV at 36 Mbit/s. The quality of the base layer, using 9 of the 36 Mbit/s, is high enough for normal TV broadcasting; it is however not sufficient for an HDTV 'fall back solution', which could occur in the case of bad reception conditions.
More tests are planned for testing MPEG-2's "Main Profile" for HDTV use at bitrates of 18, 30 and 45 Mbit/s. Taking into account the intended use of these profiles, the tests will be carried out with video and movie material.
Use of the MPEG-2 Audio standard will be further promoted through continuing work on improvements in quality, largely dependent on encoder optimisation, and the distribution of reference software and compressed multichannel audio sequences over the Internet.
MPEG is also working on the development of a multichannel audio coding standard that is not backward compatible to MPEG-1 Audio but still part of the MPEG-2 standard. A Call for Proposals was issued in July 1994 and twelve companies have already responded presenting an outline of their intended proposals. Detailed proposals will be presented at the next MPEG meeting (March '95), but the collaboration among the proposers has already started in Singapore using a common reference model.
The same work is also being carried out for MPEG-2: a technical report for MPEG-2 Video, including reference software for coding and decoding, was approved for balloting as Proposed Draft Technical Report 13818-5.
The work on MPEG-2 Conformance is at an advanced stage of development: the conformance document was reviewed and approved as CD 13818-4 and submitted for balloting.
11172 (MPEG-1) Coding of moving pictures and associate audio for digital
storage media at up to about 1.5 Mbit/s
IS date (Year/Month)
Part 1 Systems 92/11
Part 2 Video 92/11
Part 3 Audio 92/11
Part 4 Conformance testing 94/11
Part 5 Simulation software 95/03
13818 (MPEG-2) Generic coding of moving pictures and associated audio
Part 1 Systems 94/11
Part 2 Video 94/11
Part 3 Audio 94/11
Part 4 Conformance testing 95/07
Part 5 Simulation software 95/07
Part 6 Digital storage media command and control 95/09
Part 7 Non-backwards compatible audio 97/03
Part 8 10 bit video 96/07
Part 9 Real-time interface 95/11
14496 (MPEG-4) Very low bitrate audio-visual coding
Part 1 Systems 98/11
Part 2 Video 98/11
Part 3 Audio 98/11