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Kedar Tatwawadi

Kedar Tatwawadi contributes to research discovery and scholarly infrastructure.

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Published work

5 published item(s)

preprint2026arXiv

What Matters in Practical Learned Image Compression

One of the major differentiators unlocked by learned codecs relative to their hard-coded traditional counterparts is their ability to be optimized directly to appeal to the human visual system. Despite this potential, a perceptual yet practical image codec is yet to be proposed. In this work, we aim to close this gap. We conduct a comprehensive study of the key modeling choices that govern the design of a practical learned image codec, jointly optimized for perceptual quality and runtime -- including within the ablations several novel techniques. We then perform performance-aware neural architecture search over millions of backbone configurations to identify models that achieve the target on-device runtime while maximizing compression performance as captured by perceptual metrics. We combine the various optimizations to construct a new codec that achieves a significantly improved tradeoff between speed and perceptual quality. Based on rigorous subjective user studies, it provides 2.3-3x bitrate savings against AV1, AV2, VVC, ECM and JPEG-AI, and 20-40% bitrate savings against the best learned codec alternatives. At the same time, on an iPhone 17 Pro Max, it encodes 12MP images as fast as 230ms, and decodes them in 150ms -- faster than most top ML-based codecs run on a V100 GPU.

preprint2022arXiv

An Interactive Annotation Tool for Perceptual Video Compression

Human perception is at the core of lossy video compression and yet, it is challenging to collect data that is sufficiently dense to drive compression. In perceptual quality assessment, human feedback is typically collected as a single scalar quality score indicating preference of one distorted video over another. In reality, some videos may be better in some parts but not in others. We propose an approach to collecting finer-grained feedback by asking users to use an interactive tool to directly optimize for perceptual quality given a fixed bitrate. To this end, we built a novel web-tool which allows users to paint these spatio-temporal importance maps over videos. The tool allows for interactive successive refinement: we iteratively re-encode the original video according to the painted importance maps, while maintaining the same bitrate, thus allowing the user to visually see the trade-off of assigning higher importance to one spatio-temporal part of the video at the cost of others. We use this tool to collect data in-the-wild (10 videos, 17 users) and utilize the obtained importance maps in the context of x264 coding to demonstrate that the tool can indeed be used to generate videos which, at the same bitrate, look perceptually better through a subjective study - and are 1.9 times more likely to be preferred by viewers. The code for the tool and dataset can be found at https://github.com/jenyap/video-annotation-tool.git

preprint2021arXiv

Reducing latency and bandwidth for video streaming using keypoint extraction and digital puppetry

COVID-19 has made video communication one of the most important modes of information exchange. While extensive research has been conducted on the optimization of the video streaming pipeline, in particular the development of novel video codecs, further improvement in the video quality and latency is required, especially under poor network conditions. This paper proposes an alternative to the conventional codec through the implementation of a keypoint-centric encoder relying on the transmission of keypoint information from within a video feed. The decoder uses the streamed keypoints to generate a reconstruction preserving the semantic features in the input feed. Focusing on video calling applications, we detect and transmit the body pose and face mesh information through the network, which are displayed at the receiver in the form of animated puppets. Using efficient pose and face mesh detection in conjunction with skeleton-based animation, we demonstrate a prototype requiring lower than 35 kbps bandwidth, an order of magnitude reduction over typical video calling systems. The added computational latency due to the mesh extraction and animation is below 120ms on a standard laptop, showcasing the potential of this framework for real-time applications. The code for this work is available at https://github.com/shubhamchandak94/digital-puppetry/.

preprint2020arXiv

DZip: improved general-purpose lossless compression based on novel neural network modeling

We consider lossless compression based on statistical data modeling followed by prediction-based encoding, where an accurate statistical model for the input data leads to substantial improvements in compression. We propose DZip, a general-purpose compressor for sequential data that exploits the well-known modeling capabilities of neural networks (NNs) for prediction, followed by arithmetic coding. Dzip uses a novel hybrid architecture based on adaptive and semi-adaptive training. Unlike most NN based compressors, DZip does not require additional training data and is not restricted to specific data types, only needing the alphabet size of the input data. The proposed compressor outperforms general-purpose compressors such as Gzip (on average 26% reduction) on a variety of real datasets, achieves near-optimal compression on synthetic datasets, and performs close to specialized compressors for large sequence lengths, without any human input. The main limitation of DZip in its current implementation is the encoding/decoding time, which limits its practicality. Nevertheless, the results showcase the potential of developing improved general-purpose compressors based on neural networks and hybrid modeling.

preprint2020arXiv

LFZip: Lossy compression of multivariate floating-point time series data via improved prediction

Time series data compression is emerging as an important problem with the growth in IoT devices and sensors. Due to the presence of noise in these datasets, lossy compression can often provide significant compression gains without impacting the performance of downstream applications. In this work, we propose an error-bounded lossy compressor, LFZip, for multivariate floating-point time series data that provides guaranteed reconstruction up to user-specified maximum absolute error. The compressor is based on the prediction-quantization-entropy coder framework and benefits from improved prediction using linear models and neural networks. We evaluate the compressor on several time series datasets where it outperforms the existing state-of-the-art error-bounded lossy compressors. The code and data are available at https://github.com/shubhamchandak94/LFZip