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    ITU-R BT 1790-2007 Requirements for monitoring of broadcasting chains during operation《运行期间监视广播链的要求》.pdf

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    ITU-R BT 1790-2007 Requirements for monitoring of broadcasting chains during operation《运行期间监视广播链的要求》.pdf

    1、 Rec. ITU-R BT.1790 1 RECOMMENDATION ITU-R BT.1790 Requirements for monitoring of broadcasting chains during operation (Questions ITU-R 44/6, ITU-R 48/6 and ITU-R 109/6) (2007) Scope This Recommendation describes broadcasters requirements for operational monitoring in digital broadcasting chains. Mo

    2、nitoring issues are first categorized into status monitoring and quality monitoring, and the requirements are itemized in each category. The ITU Radiocommunication Assembly, considering a) that broadcasting chains are composed of contribution and distribution networks, production and post-production

    3、, and satellite and terrestrial emissions to the end-user; b) that the whole delivery chain is composed of a multiplicity of cascaded processing devices such as converters, encoders, switches, multiplexers, modulators, receivers, etc.; c) that digital audiovisual and audio services have rapidly deve

    4、loped based on advances in digital signal compression and communication technologies; d) that digital compression coding technologies have enabled the widespread growth of high-quality multichannel audiovisual services; e) that audiovisual signals after digital coding processing have different chara

    5、cteristics from those of conventional analogue signals; f) that the digitizing of broadcasting systems have made them more advanced and complex; g) that it has become difficult to manage the quality by conventional methods for monitoring or subjective evaluation, and has become necessary to develop

    6、new monitoring methods; h) that monitoring today is conducted mainly by human operators, but the increased functionality and complexity of digital broadcasting systems increase the need for automatic monitoring; j) that a unified approach for monitoring for every step in a broadcasting chain would f

    7、acilitate the development of reliable, efficient and cost-effective monitoring systems for broadcasting chains; k) that broadcasters are seeking to provide guidance to equipment manufacturers on the operational monitoring requirements in broadcasting chains, recommends 1 that the broadcasters requir

    8、ements for operational monitoring described in Annex 1 should be taken into account for the development of monitoring systems in broadcasting chains. 2 Rec. ITU-R BT.1790 Annex 1 1 Introduction Digital compression coding technologies have enabled the widespread growth of high-quality multichannel au

    9、diovisual services. Audiovisual signals after digital coding processing have characteristics different from those of conventional analogue signals, e.g. the perceptual quality depends on the content and the characteristics of the original signal, and degradation due to digital compression coding and

    10、 transmission errors often occurs locally. In addition, digitalization has made systems more advanced and complex, and new services, such as data broadcasting, have emerged. Therefore, it has become difficult to manage the quality of digital broadcasting systems by conventional methods for monitorin

    11、g analogue systems or subjective evaluation, and a new monitoring method is needed. This Recommendation describes user requirements for operational monitoring for digital broadcasting chains based on the quality monitoring/assessment technologies to be introduced in broadcasting stations and communi

    12、cation carriers. 2 References 2.1 Informative references Recommendation ITU-R BS.1387 Method for objective measurements of perceived audio quality. Recommendation ITU-R BT.1204 Measuring methods for digital video equipment with analogue input/output. Recommendation ITU-R BT.1683 Objective perceptual

    13、 video quality measurement techniques for standard definition digital broadcast television in the presence of a full reference. Recommendation ITU-R BT.1720 Quality of service ranking and measurement methods for digital video broadcasting services delivered over broadband Internet protocol networks.

    14、 ITU-T Recommendation J.143 (2000) User requirements for objective perceptual video quality measurements in digital cable television. ITU-T Recommendation J.148 (2003) Requirements for an objective perceptual multimedia quality model. 3 Types of monitoring Operational monitoring means to monitor whe

    15、ther the object is in the desired operational status or conforms to the standard or specification. In this Recommendation, operational monitoring especially means in-service objective monitoring operation by equipment, not by human operators. It is categorized into status monitoring of physical sign

    16、al levels and perceptual quality monitoring of audiovisual contents. Signals to be monitored are categorized into the following three: Baseband signal (SDI, analogue video and audio signals, etc.). Coded bit-stream (MPEG-2-TS signals, etc.). Modulated signal (RF signals, etc.). Rec. ITU-R BT.1790 3

    17、3.1 Status monitoring (test of physical signal conformance to standards and specifications) Status monitoring means to monitor whether signals conform to certain standards or specifications, which means judgment by some physical quantity of in-service signals including the status of equipment and tr

    18、ansmission links. Equipment and networks necessary for digital broadcasting chains are also monitored as to whether they are functioning appropriately. Applications of status monitoring include contribution such as transmission by communication networks, live relay and news gathering, production and

    19、 post-production and master in a broadcasting station, and primary/secondary distribution and emission (see Fig. 1). 3.2 Quality monitoring (assessment of perceptual quality for service contents) Quality monitoring means to monitor whether the perceptual quality of contents such as video, audio, dat

    20、a and characters conforms to a certain quality level, which depends on the applications intended by the providers. This Recommendation concerns monitoring of in-service contents by objective assessment instead of subjective assessment. The monitored points are those where subjective or objective qua

    21、lity assessment by operators is possible. Applications of quality monitoring include broadcasting reception in addition to those for status monitoring (see Fig. 1). It is important to include monitoring of the received signal because clock jitter and cyclic redundancy check (CRC) errors are accumula

    22、ted at each stage and sometimes lead to degradation of final quality, even if each process in a broadcasting chain conforms to the standard. 4 Issues in operational monitoring 4.1 Issues in status monitoring There are different causes of signal degradation, such as transmission errors, unlocked cloc

    23、k, improper original signals and malfunctioning of transmission links and equipment. It is difficult to identify the cause only by monitoring video and audio signals. Errors may occur in video and audio signals even if the signals conform to standards and equipment is functioning normally. The cause

    24、s of digital errors are in general more difficult to identify than those of analogue errors. For example, even if each piece of equipment conforms to its specification, clock jitter and CRC errors may accumulate at each process. 4 Rec. ITU-R BT.1790 Black signals or silent signals may lead to false

    25、alarms by automatic monitoring equipment even though they are intentional. 4.2 Issues in quality monitoring In digital audiovisual systems, very complex processing such as content-adaptive processing, switching between different operational modes and change of bit rates is performed. In addition, th

    26、e operational status of an encoder frequently changes. Therefore, the cause of degradation is very complicated. The quality of digitally encoded video and audio signals depends on the characteristics and contents of the original signal and tends to degrade locally. In addition, the degradation pecul

    27、iar to digital coding, such as blockiness is very different from analogue degradation. Therefore, the conventional quality criteria for analogue signals are not necessarily appropriate for judging the quality of digitally coded audiovisual signals. In digital broadcasting, various levels of quality

    28、of services can be provided in the same channel, according to bit rates and content. Quality criteria may differ depending on services. Quality management is not easy for format converters (e.g. up-converters, down-converters, frame rate converters and aspect ratio converters) since the input and ou

    29、tput formats are different. There may be problems in synchronizing video processing and audio processing. Reception quality may be dependent on receivers due to different performance behaviours especially in the case of transmission errors. 5 User requirements for operational monitoring 5.1 Common r

    30、equirements for status and quality monitoring In digital broadcasting, bandwidth is very effectively used by compression coding of audiovisual contents, which is different from analogue systems. Digital broadcasting has increased the number of channels and made various services possible. On the othe

    31、r hand, the broadcasting system has become so complex that the limited number of operators can no longer adequately monitor digital broadcasting equipment. The common requirements for status and quality monitoring, which are essential for reducing the operational burden and realizing advanced and fl

    32、exible digital broadcasting services, are as follows: Capability of in-service monitoring Applicability to the video formats in use such as SDTV and HDTV Applicability to the numbers of audio channels in use Applicability to the coding bit rates in use, irrespective of variable bit rate (VBR) or con

    33、stant bit rate (CBR) Applicability to the transmission bit rates in use Applicability to the coding parameters and tools (e.g. profile/level, picture structure, range of motion vectors) in use Applicability to different signal processing such as compression coding, standards conversion and aspect ra

    34、tio conversion Applicability to different sources of degradation (e.g. compression ratio and transmission error rate) Rec. ITU-R BT.1790 5 Applicability to different programme contents Applicability to the system configurations in use Traceability of the causes of malfunction, failure and degradatio

    35、n Availability of precise information for switching to a reserve system from the monitoring result 5.2 Requirements for status monitoring In digital broadcasting chains, even if the monitored signal conforms to its specification and each piece of equipment is functioning normally, errors sometimes o

    36、ccur in a later stage of the chain. It is highly desired to adapt to complex digital broadcasting systems and to support operators by the precise detection of errors and malfunctions of equipment. The user requirements for status monitoring are as follows: Ability to judge whether the signal includi

    37、ng RF characteristics and syntax conforms to its specification Ability to detect any errors in the signal Ability to monitor the functioning status of equipment including malfunctions Ability to detect errors and malfunctions precisely in a short time (preferably in real-time) Ability to monitor eac

    38、h component and equipment in the broadcasting chain Ability to check auxiliary data (e.g. data broadcasting contents, closed captions and EPG) Applicability to bit-streams (e.g. MPEG-TS) and RF signals, in addition to baseband video and audio signals Ability to detect errors which cannot be detected

    39、 by humans (e.g. occasional bit error) Ability to automatically scan auxiliary data (e.g. data broadcasting contents and closed captions) to see whether they are as intended 5.3 Requirements for quality monitoring For quality management of digital broadcasting, conventional subjective quality assess

    40、ment methods and waveform-based measurement methods are not sufficient. A novel assessment method based on systematic monitoring of quality is needed. As digital broadcasting mainly uses a signal form of bit-streams such as MPEG-TS instead of conventional baseband signals, there are fewer monitoring

    41、 points which human operators can subjectively assess. In addition, there is an issue of relative delay between video and audio due to the processes such as codecs, A/D and D/A. The user requirements for quality monitoring are as follows: Ability to evaluate quantitatively the perceptual quality Abi

    42、lity to perform systematically an objective quality assessment with a precision close to subjective quality assessment by humans Ability to perform perceptual quality assessment using only bit-streams (e.g. TS) Ability to perform perceptual quality assessment using only the signals concerned (i.e. n

    43、on-reference methods) Ability to evaluate an overall audiovisual quality (e.g. A/V relative timing) Ability to detect the occurrence point of quality degradation Ability to perform perceptual quality assessment using only baseband signals 6 Rec. ITU-R BT.1790 Repeatability (i.e. evaluation result sh

    44、ould not be affected by the successive signals) Ability to evaluate quality in a short time or instantaneously 5.4 Requirements for monitoring equipment Equipment for monitoring status and quality must be highly functional and compact, as digital broadcasting systems are becoming increasingly advanc

    45、ed and complicated. The scope of applications for status and quality monitoring is very wide as shown in 4, and the requirements for monitoring equipment depend on the cases. The common requirements are as follows: The monitoring method should not disturb the monitored signals Simultaneous measureme

    46、nt of multiple signals or channels in use Easy maintenance Quietness Ability to log the assessment results for later use Compatibility among different manufacturers, including the log format (i.e. a standard format needs to be provided) Extendibility to more monitored signals and items when required Easy selection of displayed items among multiple items to be monitored User-friendly display of the status and errors Real-time and continuous usability


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