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The Moving Picture Experts Group (MPEG) is a small group charged with the development of video and audio encoding standards. Since its first meeting in 1988, MPEG has grown to include approximately 350 members from various industries and universities. MPEG's official designation is ISO/IEC JTC1/SC29 WG11.

MPEG has standardized the following compression formats and ancillary standards:

1 How MPEG works

The MPEG codecs use lossy data compressionA lossy data compression method is one where compressing a file and then decompressing it retrieves a file that may well be different to the original, but is "close enough" to be useful in some way. This type of compression is used a lot on the Internet a using transform codec s. In lossy transform codecs, samples of picture or sound are taken, chopped into small segments, transformed into a frequency space, and quantizedSignal processing In digital signal processing, quantization is the process of approximating a continuous signal by a set of discrete symbols or integer values; that is, converting an analog signal to a digital one. In general, a quantization operator can. The resulting quantized values are then entropy coded.

The moving picture coding systems such as MPEG-1, MPEG-2, and MPEG-4 add an extra step, where the picture content is predicted from past reconstructed images before coding, and only the differences from the reconstructed pictures, and any extra information needed to perform the prediction, are coded.

MPEG standardizes only the bitstream format and the decoder. The encoder is not standardized in any way but there are reference implementations available for members that produce valid bitstreams. That means that any MPEG-4 decoder can decode any MPEG-4 material (of the same type) regardless of the encoder which produced that material.

2 See also

3 External links







Video and movie technology



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