User User name Password  
   
Sunday 29.11.2009 / 07:16 AM
Search AfterDawn.com:        In English   Suomeksi   På svenska
afterdawn.com > glossary > Quarter Pixel Motion Estimation
Show topics
Glossary
Glossary

Quarter Pixel Motion Estimation

(synonyms: Qpel,Q-Pel )

Quarter pixel (often also called as q-pel or qpel) refers exactly to what it states, to a quarter of a standard pixel.

But what makes it so often-used term in video technology is that several advanced video encoding methods, such as certain MPEG-4's flavors use so-called motion estimation to improve the video quality and when the technical specs refer to how precise each compression mechanism's motion estimation routines are, they typically are far more accurate than simply one pixel, but rather come down to sizes of a quarter pixel.

Quarter-Pixel Motion Compensation allows the calculations used to detect motion (for prediction purposes) to be more accurate than MPEG-2. Although obviously you can't store less than a whole pixel, that doesn't mean movement in your video will be in 1 pixel increments. By increasing the precision to 1/4 of a pixel (from MPEG-2's Half Pixel precision) prediction is improved, sometimes meaning better quality at a comparable bitrate. Older standalone DVD players with MPEG-4 ASP support won't playback files encoded with Qpel, but it shouldn't be a problem for newer models.

Quarter Pixel Precision (Qpel) for Motion Estimation is used to more accurately track movement across the video frame. Although entire pixels must be stored, when calculating locations for a moving object the motion from one frame to the next may be less than a single pixel. MPEG-2 uses Half Pixel Precision.

For more information, see the glossary definitions for:

Bitrate Encode Motion Estimation MPEG-2 MPEG-4 ASP MPEG-4 SP
 Post your comment
Comment this glossary entry!
jhb1 10 August, 2007 8:41 Send private message to this user  
On this file, can you use a dvd copy program to make an avi or x-vid to a dvd format and then copy it back to x-vid or avi? I hate these file.
 Post your comment
Select a term to see the explanation

 
Missing something? Suggest a new glossary entry!
 
Select a file extension to see its definition
  • .7z
  • .aa
  • .aac
  • .ac3
  • .aif
  • .aifc
  • .aiff
  • .amr
  • .ape
  • .asf
  • .asx
  • .avi
  • .avs
  • .awb
  • .bik
  • .bin
  • .bup
  • .ccd
  • .cda
  • .cso
  • .cue
  • .d2v
  • .dal
  • .dat
  • .divx
  • .doc
  • .ecl
  • .exe
  • .fla
  • .flac
  • .gz
  • .ifo
  • .img
  • .iso
  • .ivf
  • .list
  • .m2v
  • .m3u
  • .m4a
  • .m4b
  • .m4p
  • .mds
  • .met
  • .mkv
  • .mnu
  • .mov
  • .mp+
  • .mp2
  • .mp3
  • .mp4
  • .mpc
  • .mpeg
  • .mpg
  • .nds
  • .nfo
  • .nrg
  • .ogg
  • .pbp
  • .pdf
  • .pls
  • .r01
  • .ra
  • .rar
  • .ratdvd
  • .rm
  • .sfv
  • .shn
  • .smk
  • .srt
  • .ssa
  • .sub
  • .sxc
  • .sxw
  • .tap
  • .tar
  • .tgz
  • .tme1
  • .torrent
  • .ts
  • .txt
  • .vaf
  • .vob
  • .vpd
  • .wav
  • .wax
  • .wm
  • .wma
  • .wmd
  • .wmv
  • .wvx
  • .xls
  • .xtodvd
  • .zip
  • Digital video: AfterDawn.com | AfterDawn Forums
    Music: MP3Lizard.com
    Gaming: Blasteroids.com | Blasteroids Forums | Compare game prices
    Software: Software downloads
    Blogs: User profile pages
    RSS feeds: AfterDawn.com News | Software updates | AfterDawn Forums
    International: AfterDawn in Finnish | AfterDawn in Swedish | download.fi
    Navigate: Search | Site map
    About us: About AfterDawn Ltd | Advertise on our sites | Rules, Restrictions, Legal disclaimer & Privacy policy
    Contact us: Send feedback | Contact our media sales team
     
      © 1999-2009 by AfterDawn Ltd.