English

PNVC: Towards Practical INR-based Video Compression

Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition 2024-09-04 v1

Abstract

Neural video compression has recently demonstrated significant potential to compete with conventional video codecs in terms of rate-quality performance. These learned video codecs are however associated with various issues related to decoding complexity (for autoencoder-based methods) and/or system delays (for implicit neural representation (INR) based models), which currently prevent them from being deployed in practical applications. In this paper, targeting a practical neural video codec, we propose a novel INR-based coding framework, PNVC, which innovatively combines autoencoder-based and overfitted solutions. Our approach benefits from several design innovations, including a new structural reparameterization-based architecture, hierarchical quality control, modulation-based entropy modeling, and scale-aware positional embedding. Supporting both low delay (LD) and random access (RA) configurations, PNVC outperforms existing INR-based codecs, achieving nearly 35%+ BD-rate savings against HEVC HM 18.0 (LD) - almost 10% more compared to one of the state-of-the-art INR-based codecs, HiNeRV and 5% more over VTM 20.0 (LD), while maintaining 20+ FPS decoding speeds for 1080p content. This represents an important step forward for INR-based video coding, moving it towards practical deployment. The source code will be available for public evaluation.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.2409.00953,
  title  = {PNVC: Towards Practical INR-based Video Compression},
  author = {Ge Gao and Ho Man Kwan and Fan Zhang and David Bull},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2409.00953},
  year   = {2024}
}
R2 v1 2026-06-28T18:30:58.219Z