Yunqing Wang
Yunqing Wang is a senior staff software engineer at Google, and has been working on AV1 and VPx series video codec development since 2007. Dr. Wang received the B.S. and Ph.D. degrees in Precision Instrument from Tsinghua University in 1991 and 1996, respectively, and the M.S. degree in Computer Science from University of Massachusetts at Amherst in 2002. Her research interests include video compression and optimization, and machine learning.
Research Areas
Authored Publications
Sort By
AN OVERVIEW OF CORE CODING TOOLS IN THE AV1 VIDEO CODEC
Adrian Grange
Andrey Norkin
Ching-Han Chiang
Hui Su
Jean-Marc Valin
Luc Trudeau
Nathan Egge
Paul Wilkins
Peter de Rivaz
Sarah Parker
Steinar Midtskogen
Thomas Davies
Zoe Liu
The Picture Coding Symposium (PCS) (2018)
Preview abstract
AV1 is an emerging open-source and royalty-free video compression format, which is jointly developed and finalized in early 2018 by the Alliance for Open Media (AOMedia) industry consortium. The main goal of AV1 development is to achieve substantial compression gain over state-of-the-art codecs while maintaining practical decoding complexity and hardware feasibility. This paper provides a brief technical overview of key coding techniques in AV1 along with preliminary compression performance comparison against VP9 and HEVC.
View details
Novel inter and intra prediction tools under consideration for the emerging AV1 video codec
Sarah Parker
Hui Su
Angie Chiang
Zoe Liu
Chen Wang
Emil Keyder
SPIE Optical Engineering + Applications, 10396 (2017), 10396 - 10396 - 13
Preview abstract
Google started the WebM Project in 2010 to develop open source, royalty-free video codecs designed specifically for media on the Web. The second generation codec released by the WebM project, VP9, is currently served by YouTube, and enjoys billions of views per day. Realizing the need for even greater compression efficiency to cope with the growing demand for video on the web, the WebM team embarked on an ambitious project to develop a next edition codec AV1, in a consortium of major tech companies called the Alliance for Open Media, that achieves at least a generational improvement in coding efficiency over VP9. In this paper, we focus primarily on new tools in AV1 that improve the prediction of pixel blocks before transforms, quantization and entropy coding are invoked. Specifically, we describe tools and coding modes that improve intra, inter and combined inter-intra prediction. Results are presented on standard test sets.
View details