Semantic label bias in subjective video quality evaluation: A standardization perspective

Research output: Contribution to journalConference articlepeer-review

Abstract

Recent studies brought to light that the semantic labels (e.g. Excellent, Good, Fair, Poor, and Bad) commonly associated with discrete scale ITU subjective quality evaluation induce a bias in MOS computation and that such a bias can be quantified by some reference coefficients which are independent with respect to the observers panel. The present paper reconsiders these results from a standard upgrading perspective. First, it theoretically investigates the way in which results obtained on semantically labeled scales can be “cleaned” from such an influence and derives the underlying computation formula for the mean opinion score. Secondly, it suggests a unitary evaluation procedure featuring both semantic free MOS computation and backward compatibility with respect to state-of-the-art solutions. The theoretical and methodological results are supported by subjective experiments corresponding to a total of 440 human observers, alternatively scoring 2D and stereoscopic video content. For each type of content, both high and low quality excerpts are alternatively considered. For each type of content and for each type of quality a 5 level (Excellent, Good, Fair, Poor, and Bad) grading scales is considered.

Original languageEnglish
Article numberIQSP-311
JournalIS and T International Symposium on Electronic Imaging Science and Technology
Volume2019
Issue number10
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 13 Jan 2019
Event16th Image Quality and System Performance Conference, IQSP 2019 - Burlingame, United States
Duration: 13 Jan 201917 Jan 2019

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