Backward compatible enhancement of chroma format in HEVC
27 October 2014
First version of the latest video coding standard, High Efficiency Video Coding (HEVC), only supports coding of video in YUV 4:2:0 chroma format. An extension of the standard that will support other chroma formats is currently under development, however, version 1 decoders will not be able to handle the bitstreams created using this extension. In this paper, we propose a novel method to create scalable bitstreams that involve a backward compatible base layer in 4:2:0 format that can be handled by HEVC version 1 decoders and code additional layers to enhance the chroma resolution. The proposal codes 4:2:0 video in the base layer and the high resolution chroma components as auxiliary pictures as separate enhancement layers. The high resolution chroma components could optionally be predicted from the upsampled 4:2:0 chroma components of base layer. The simulations show that the proposed method achieves scalability with 9.5% coding efficiency penalty on average compared to single layer coding of 4:4:4 video. When compared to simulcast of 4:2:0 and 4:4:4 video, proposed method provides 38% gain on average. Proposed method makes services using high chroma fidelity easier to be deployed, due to the backwards compatibility to existing HEVC implementations with high coding efficiency.