| Measurement of visual impairment scales for digital video  (2001) The  study  of  subjective  visual  quality,  and  the  development  of  computed  quality  metrics, require  accurate  and  meaningful  measurement  of  visual  impairment.  A  natural  unit  for  impairment  is  the  JND  (just-noticeable-difference).  In many cases, what is required is a measure of an impairment scale, that is, the growth of the subjective impairment, in JNDs, as some physical parameter (such as amount of artifact) is increased. Measurement  of  sensory  scales  is  a  classical  problem  in  psychophysics.  In  the  method  of  pair  comparison,  each  trial  consists  of  a  pair  of  samples  and  the  observer  selects  the  one  perceived  to  be  greater  on  the  relevant  scale.  This  may  be  regarded as an extension of the method of forced-choice: from measurement of threshold (one JND), to measurement of the larger sensory scale (multiple JNDs). While simple for the observer, pair comparison is inefficient because if all samples are compared, many comparisons will be uninformative. In general, samples separated by about 1 JND are most informative. We have  developed  an  efficient  adaptive  method  for  selection  of  sample  pairs.  As  with  the  QUEST  adaptive  threshold procedure[1], the method is based on Bayesian estimation of the sensory scale after each trial. We call the method Efficient Adaptive Scale Estimation, or EASE ("to make less painful"). We  have  used  the  EASE  method  to  measure  impairment  scales  for  digital  video.  Each  video  was  derived  from  an  original  source  (SRC)  by  the  addition  of  a  particular  artifact,  produced  by  a  particular  codec  at  a  specific  bit  rate,  called  a hypothetical  reference  circuit  (HRC).  Different  amounts  of  artifact  were  produced  by  linear  combination  of  the  source  and compressed  videos.  On  each  pair-comparison  trial  the  observer  selected  which  of  two  sequences,  containing  different  amounts  of  artifact,  appeared  more  impaired.  The  scale  is  estimated  from  the  pair  comparison  data  using  a  maximum  likelihood  method.  At  the  top  of  the  scale,  when  all  of  the  artifact  is  present,  the  scale  value  is  the  total  number  of  JNDs   corresponding to that SRC/HRC condition. We  have  measured  impairment  scales  for  25  video  sequences,  derived  from  five  SRCs  combined  with  each  of  five HRCs.  We  find  that  EASE  is  a  reliable  method  for  measuring  impairment  scales  and  JNDs  for  processed  video  sequences. We  have  compared  our  JND  measurements  with  mean  opinion  scores  for  the  same  sequences  obtained  at  one  viewing  distance  using  the  DSCQS  method  by  the  Video  Quality  Experts  Group  (VQEG),  and  we  find  that  the  two  measures  are  highly  correlated.  The  advantages  of  the  JND  measurements  are  that  they  are  in  absolute  and  meaningful  units  and  are  unlikely  to  be subject  to  context  effects.  We  note  that  JND  measurements  offer  a  means  of  creating  calibrated  artifact   samples, and of testing and calibrating video quality models.  digital, impairment, Measurement, scales, video, visual Proceedings, Human Vision, Visual Processing, and Digital Display IX, San Jose, CA, SPIE, Bellingham, WA, 4299 |