EURASIP Journal on Applied Signal Processing

  Special Issue on

  Video Adaptation for Heterogeneous Environments

  Call for Papers

The explosive growth of compressed video streams and repositories
accessible worldwide, the recent addition of new video-related
standards such as H.264/AVC, MPEG-7 and MPEG-21, and the
ever-increasing prevalence of heterogeneous, video-enabled
terminals such as computer, TV, mobile phones and personal
digital assistants, have escalated the need for efficient and
effective techniques for adapting compressed videos to suit
better the different capabilities, constraints, and requirements
of various transmission networks, applications, and end users.
For instance, Universal Multimedia Access (UMA) advocates the
provision and adaptation of the same multimedia content for different
networks, terminals, and user preferences.

Video adaptation is an emerging field that offers a rich body of
knowledge and techniques for handling the huge variation of resource
constraints (e.g., bandwidth, display capability, processing speed,
and power consumption) and the large diversity of user tasks in
pervasive media applications. Considerable amounts of research and
development activities in industry and academia have been devoted to
answering the many challenges in making better use of video content
across systems and applications of various kinds.

Video adaptation may apply to individual or multiple video streams
and call for different means depending on the objectives and
requirements of adaptation. Transcoding, transmoding (cross-modality
transcoding), scalable content representation, content abstraction
and summarization are popular means for video adaptation. In
addition, video content analysis and understanding, including
low-level feature analysis and high-level semantics understanding,
play an important role in video adaptation as essential video
content can be better preserved.

The aim of this special issue is to present state-of-the-art
developments in this flourishing and important research field.
Contributions in theoretical study, architecture design, performance
analysis, complexity reduction, and real-world applications are all
welcome.

Topics of interest include (but are not limited to)

 o Heterogeneous video transcoding Scalable video coding Dynamic
 o Scalable video coding
 o Dynamic bitstream switching for video adaptation
 o Signal, structural, and semantic-level video adaptation
 o Content analysis and understanding for video adaptation
 o Video summarization and abstraction
 o Copyright protection for video adaptation
 o Crossmedia techniques for video adaptation
 o Testing, field trials, and applications of video adaptation services
 o International standard activities for video adaptation

Authors should follow the EURASIP JASP manuscript format described
at the journal site http://www.hindawi.com/journals/asp/. Prospective
authors should submit an electronic copy of their complete manuscript
through the EURASIP JASP's manuscript tracking system at journal's web
site, according to the following timetable.

  Manuscript Due            September 1, 2006
  Acceptance Notification   January 1, 2007
  Final Manuscript Due      April 1, 2007
  Publication Date          3rd Quarter, 2007

Guest Editors:

Chia-Wen Lin, Department of Computer Science and Information Engineering,
Natioanl Chung Cheng University, Chiayi 621, Taiwan;
cwlin@cs.ccu.edu.tw

Yap-Peng Tan, School of Electrical and Electronic Engineering,
Nanyang Technological University, Nanyang Avenue, Singapore 639798,
Singapore; EYPTan@ntu.edu.sg

Ming-Ting Sun, Department of Electrical Engineering,
University of Washington, Seattle, WA 98195, USA;
sun@ee.washington.edu

Alex Kot, School of Electrical and Electronic Engineering, Nanyang
Technological University, Nanyang Avenue, Singapore 639798,
Singapore; eackot@ntu.edu.sg

Anthony Vetro, Mitsubishi Electric Research Laboratories, 201
Broadway, 8th Floor, Cambridge, MA 02138, USA;
avetro@merl.com