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Video MOS on Android YouTube
Application Note

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Application Note

Test & Measurement

8002667883 01

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Contents

Contents
1 Introduction............................................................................................ 5
1.1

A Short History of YouTube......................................................................................... 5

1.2

Measurement Considerations......................................................................................6

2 Video Compression and Resolution on YouTube...............................7


2.1

YouTube App Versions.................................................................................................8

2.2

Streaming With DASH...................................................................................................8

2.3

YouTube App Versions That Use DASH................................................................... 11

3 Video Quality Testing in YouTube......................................................12


4 Implementation of Video-MOS in QualiPoc....................................... 14
4.1

New ITU-T J.343.1 Standard....................................................................................... 14

4.2

Using J.343.1 for YouTube Tests...............................................................................14

4.3

Handling of Freezing, Still Images, and Black Frames............................................16

4.4

Example YouTube Video Quality Examples............................................................. 17

4.5

Compatibility............................................................................................................... 18

Annex.................................................................................................... 19
A Customer Support Center................................................................... 19

Application Note 8002667883 01

SwissQual... QualiPoc & Diversity

Application Note 8002667883 01

Contents

SwissQual... QualiPoc & Diversity

Introduction
A Short History of YouTube

1 Introduction
YouTube is moving away from a pure video-streaming platform that streams uploaded
videos to an application on a smartphone or a PC. YouTube has become a complex
and interactive portal that provides additional information prior and parallel the video.
The video itself is delivered in different qualities according to access technology. YouTube encrypts video transmission and uses DASH now to react dynamically to available network capacity by reducing or increasing the video bitrate. This approach leads
to variable video quality and targets the best trade-off between compression and freezing, that is, preferring a slightly blurry video to a stalled video.
Consequently, testing and measuring the YouTube video streaming service has
become more complicated. The change of the YouTube session structure moves away
from the sequential step-by-step buildup as assumed in standard measuring procedures. As a result, some trigger-points as defined by ETSI are either no longer accessible through encryption or now have a different meaning due to the different session
structure. SwissQual now focuses on events that are visible to a viewer to provide a
more customer oriented, flexible, and future-proof solution.
Bitstream encryption is not the only challenge. YouTube also scales down the resolution and changes the spatial compression of a video based on access technology and
network capacity. The YouTube client requests video chunks in a quality that is appropriate to the current channel capacity. Pre-buffering is scaled up in high capacity situations and video chunks are re-loaded when the network improves. All of these changes
render the mean video bitrate obsolete as an indicator of video quality. Hence a high
quality algorithm that considers all of these impacts is required.
SwissQual has integrated a real visual quality measure that combines bitstream information with image information to consider what the viewer actually sees. The implemented measure is the ITU-T J.343.1 standard from 2014, which is the first imagebased no reference model that has been standardized in ITU-T. The ITU-T J.343.1
algorithm is available on QualiPoc Android and has been designed for video streaming
services that use encrypted streams. This lean algorithm combines image and IP
header information to predict Video Mean Opinion Scores (MOS) and is perfectly tailored for use on smartphones.
By introducing this Video MOS for YouTube video streaming, SwissQual emphasizes
and proves its leadership in applied research and Android development in order to
handle the latest technology trends.

1.1 A Short History of YouTube


When YouTube started out it was a passing hosting platform where people uploaded
and shared private video streams. YouTube prepared the videos for streaming to
Adobes Flash Player, which was the prevalent browser plug-in streaming client. The
proprietary video container was later changed to MP4, while the first mobile applications were served 3GP video streams. The compression codecs were MP4 and H.264.
The basic approach was to compress and stream the video continuously.

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Introduction
Measurement Considerations

Since networks could not deliver constant throughputs, YouTube, along with other
video on demand services, implemented a progressive download strategy to avoid
interruptions in the video stream. This strategy created a buffer which stored the partially downloaded video stream before the playout started and to bridge gaps that would
have occurred in the absence of new packets. The determination of buffer length continues to be a topic of optimization.
YouTube soon became interesting to professional and semi-professional content providers and its content grew rapidly. The YouTube platform was extended to include
additional information, such as advertisements and the listing of the most watched videos.
Technological advances since YouTube's inception have resulted in more people viewing its content on mobile YouTube apps than on traditional PC player base.
YouTube has been moving away from streaming single MP4 files, where the entire clip
was encoded with at a specific bitrate, to hosting the same video clips at different resolutions, including other transmission technologies. YouTube recently introduced
Dynamic Adaptive Streaming over HTTP (DASH) and has started a transition to other
video codecs.
YouTube still provides the older formats and continues to support players and smartphone Apps that have not been updated for years. That is, each video is available in
several formats and based on the requesting application, YouTube streams the matching format. Even today, RTSP streams from the early days are accessible, but in a
reduced number of resolutions. This approach leads to the fact that for the same
requested video, physically very different streams are delivered to different player or
mobile App versions.

1.2 Measurement Considerations


The YouTube player version along with the technologies that are used on the YouTube
server side are an important consideration for video quality measurement. The YouTube streaming process includes many influences on quality that are completely independent of the user and measurement gear.
The composition of the servers current technology, the network, and the players capabilities are always evaluated during the measurement. Measurement results provides a
snapshot at the time of the measurement. However, even under the same network
conditions, the measured quality can be different at a different point in time if the technology has been changed or if the support of individual players becomes restricted.

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Video Compression and Resolution on YouTube

2 Video Compression and Resolution on YouTube


For a long time YouTube encoded video streams in a target bitrate for a given resolution, for example, around 500kbit/s for a 360p video clip. This principle was not
changed with the introduction of different container formats. Starting with HD content,
the video container was MP4 and the lower resolutions were changed from Flash FLV
to 3GP, a derivative of MP4 that was optimized for mobile transmission.
YouTube transcoded each uploaded video to all of the supported formats and resolutions and then stores the files on YouTube servers. The resolution of the video screen
remained constant in the stream while its size depended on the type of player. For
example, the Flash player on a PC allowed you to select the resolution, while mobile
clients tended to be served with a fixed (low) resolution.
YouTube

User client
720p

Video upload
(for example,
HD720)

480p
Transcoding

Downstream
(for example,
360)
Player

360p
Display
240p

Figure 2-1: Schematic of YouTube streaming using a fixed resolution

When YouTube switched to HTTP/TCP transmission bit-errors that lead to heavily


impaired images stopped occurring. The only remaining problem was a potential interruption of the video stream that could not be bridged by the pre-buffered video. Such
an interruption froze the video until the packets were received again.
This was the reality for a few years. The video quality could be estimated quite well by
the bitrate and by counting the freezing effects on the screen under the assumption
that the resolution remained constant. This idea is reflected in ETSI TR 101 578 where
compression quality is considered constant and freezing the only problem.
Since then YouTube has introduced the next adaptation where video resolution, that is,
image size and compression strength, was adjusted to the access technology for
mobile devices. In this adaptation, the access technology, that is, the server and the
player decide on the quality to be delivered.

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Video Compression and Resolution on YouTube


Streaming With DASH

YouTube
720p

Video upload
(for example,
HD720)

480p

Mobile user client


'YouTube App'

WLAN
LTE

Transcoding

Player
360p
240p

Re-scaling to
phone display
2G / 3G

Figure 2-2: Schematic of YouTube selecting a fixed resolution streaming based on access technology

The first resolution that was offered to mobile users was 240p, which was later
increased to 360p. LTE clients can also receive 480p and even HD content on request.

2.1 YouTube App Versions


The strategy that has been described so far was implemented in YouTube Apps versions 4.1, 4.2, and up to the beginning of the 5 series. To provide a user with some
control, one can specify a setting to request a higher quality stream. When this setting
is enabled, the App requests the next highest resolution, for example, in 2G/3G 360p
instead of 240p and 720p for LTE. This YouTube App setting remains enabled until it is
changed again.
The main difference between versions 4 and 5 of the YouTube App is the permanent
use of the HTTPS starting with version 5 instead of unencrypted HTTP. HTTPS
encryption makes it impossible to legally retrieve information from the TCP and HTTP
layer for quality measurements. As a result of the encryption, some of the typical trigger-points for legacy HTTP streaming, as described by ETSI, are no longer accessible.
Consequently, the KPI calculation is now based fully on events that are visible by a
user instead of TCP packet analysis.

2.2 Streaming With DASH


In 2014, starting with YouTube App 5.7, YouTube introduced the new video container
DASH. DASH is the basis for adaptive streaming where video compression and resolution are adapted in 'real time'. DASH also enables reactions to network capacity problems by lowering the video bitrate on request.
In principle, the video is available in different resolutions on the server as it was in the
past. However, the video client no longer requests just the video, but rather requests
the stream piece-wise, for example, in chunks of a few seconds, and with a dedicated
resolution or bitrate. This technique allows asking for an individual resolution for each
requested piece of video. If the player derives information on the network capacity from
the received stream, for example, when looking at packet delays, this information can

Application Note 8002667883 01

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Video Compression and Resolution on YouTube


Streaming With DASH

be used to request lower resolutions when transmission capacity problems occur or to


step up to a higher resolution in case of performant networks.
DASH only enables the request of different resolutions whereas adaptivity to the network is a feature of the YouTube player.
YouTube

DASH

Control
Mobile user client
'YouTube App'

720p

Video upload
(for example,
HD720)

480p
Transcoding

Player
360p

Re-scaling to
phone display

240p

Figure 2-3: Scheme of YouTube streaming with DASH

Switching to this approach, the YouTube client on a PC or a mobile can use network
conditions to decide whether the next piece of video should be requested in a lower
resolution to ensure the transmission in time or to request more pieces in a higher
quality and higher bitrate to fill up the buffer under good network conditions.
The YouTube algorithm considers many features to achieve an optimal perceived quality. It can control which video quality is requested and for how long as well as the buffer
management.
The goal is to find the best trade-off between the following considerations:

Short pre-buffering and re-buffering to ensure that video playback starts in a short
time

Avoid freezing

Highest possible resolution

Data caps and network load rules

This trade-off is illustrated in Figure 2-4 which shows the buffer status and the reload in
case of improved network conditions.

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Video Compression and Resolution on YouTube


Streaming With DASH

No Freezing
Low compression quality
Low network load

Network capacity

Constant low bitrate


240p

Potentially Freezing
High compression quality
High network load

Constant high bitrate

480p

Minimized Freezing
Best compression quality
Optimal network load

Network capacity
Variable bitrate
720p

480p

360p
360p
240p
Figure 2-4: Principle transmission of low, high and adaptive bitrate

The use of a constant low rate will minimize freezing since a low rate can pass even
under low capacity; however, the perceived video quality is low due to the strong compression even in high capacity situations.
A constant high rate delivers good visual quality if the network is able to transport the
stream, but there is a high risk of freezing and a high network load in low capacity
infrastructure.
Finally, the adaptation of the bitrate also minimizes freezing and delivers the best possible quality. There also means to further restrict the network load for low capacity networks.
The use of DASH possibilities is just starting. Current YouTube mobile Apps request a
resolution based on access technology only and do not rapidly switch the resolution in

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Video Compression and Resolution on YouTube


YouTube App Versions That Use DASH

response to changing network conditions. However, this is expected soon and all capabilities are on board already.

2.3 YouTube App Versions That Use DASH


DASH as a protocol was introduced with YouTube App 5.7 in 2014. In version 5.10, a
change from HTTPS using open SSL to the 'speedy protocol' was made. As of March
2015 the latest YouTube App is 10.8. The adaptation is still restricted to the access
technology, that is, there is no variation of resolution when streaming to a mobile YouTube App. However, a change to encrypted HTTP 2.0 and the full use of variable
bitrate is expected soon.

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Video Quality Testing in YouTube

3 Video Quality Testing in YouTube


The perceived video quality for YouTube is determined by the applied compression
scheme, the strength of compression, and the potential freezing due to interruptions in
video delivery. Since HTTP/TCP is used as a safe transmission protocol, the received
packets are error free. By contrast, other video-telephony services as well as some
IPTV services that use RTP/UDP because of latency reasons, can have a UDP datagram with bit errors that lead to artefacts during decoding.
Based on the assumption of safe and error-free transmission most people have in YouTube, the video quality is determined by the loss of details during compressions along
with the occurrence of freezing because of an interrupted packet flow. Since freezing
can be viewed on the screen, it is easy to detect and to measure. The average bitrate
can also be measured and provides information about the compression strength.
However, there is no direct relationship between the compression ratio, that is, how
strong the original image information is compressed, and the visible quality. Individual
codecs have an individual efficiency, which determines how many details can be
pressed into a given data array. The state-of-art codec ITU-T H.264 can encode much
more details in a data structure than the previous H.263 codec and will soon be surpassed by the upcoming H.265. The new codec can achieve the same quality at H.264
with less data and lower bitrates.
Even the H.264 codec, which is widely used in streaming and TV services, supports
different profiles that can lead to different quality even if the video content and the achieved bitrate is the same.
If there is no variation in the codec and its profiles and if the evaluated video is the
same and is encoded at the same resolution, the average bitrate provides an idea
about the visual quality for a video with medium complexity.
In previous evaluations of YouTube streams, the compression ratio was constant and
quality evaluation at the fixed resolution could be restricted to freezing events only.
With the introduction of different resolutions, and thus bitrates, access technology
made this simple quality estimation unusable.
An HD session with a certain amount of freezing leads to a completely different perception of the same stream in 240p with the same freezing. Simply looking for Freezing
makes it impossible to draw conclusions about video quality across different technologies. This is a serious problem in benchmarking when operator A has 60% LTE while
delivering HD content as compared to operator B which has almost no LTE and
instead delivers blurry pictures in 240p.
It is even more complicated if the bitrate and the resolution changes within a stream as
is the case with adaptive streaming. The pure bitrate becomes an unreliable indicator
of perceived compression quality. Even an average bitrate is unreliable as there is no
evidence that all retrieved video packets are actually decoded and displayed. Often,
overlapping parts are streamed down in different resolutions, but only one is finally displayed. The strategy, that is, what is displayed and how, and whether a post-processing is applied or not, is defined by the decoder at the user side and cannot be seen in
the bitstream.

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Video Quality Testing in YouTube

As a result, a reliable estimation of video quality is only possible if the quality measure
analyses the video frames that are actually displayed and takes into account information from the decoded images. This is the reason why a video-quality measure that
examines the received bitstream and the image information is now integrated in the
SwissQual YouTube testing approach.

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Implementation of Video-MOS in QualiPoc


Using J.343.1 for YouTube Tests

4 Implementation of Video-MOS in QualiPoc


4.1 New ITU-T J.343.1 Standard
The basis for the Video MOS prediction is the recently approved J.343.1 RS-T-VModel. J.343.1 analyzes the incoming bitstream for the video client and observes the
resulting video at the same time. A video quality score is estimated based on information taken from the bitstream, such as the size of a compressed frame, and the visual
impression of the decoded and displayed video frame and its temporal flow.
J.343.1 is a no-reference method that only analyzes the video on the receiving end and
not the input video at the transmitting side. This makes J.343.1 very flexible. It can be
used for live TV or video telephony applications and is especially designed for encrypted bitstreams where access to the payload is not possible.

Video
Source
Encoding

Transcoding
MPX

IP

Decoder
Player

Meta information

J.343.1
No information about
reference video required

Figure 4-1: Principle measurement points of J.343.1

Lastly, J.341.1 is not dependent on one video resolution and contrary to previous video
quality measures, J.343.1 can produce quality scores on any resolution up to 1080p
HD content. This algorithm is perfectly suited for the variable bitrates and resolutions
that YouTube now uses.

4.2 Using J.343.1 for YouTube Tests


Technically, the algorithm is directly implemented in Android and runs on the smartphone in real-time. While the YouTube test is running, the algorithm has access to the
video bitstream, the decoded and displayed video frames, and runs a real-time analysis for each frame. The Video MOS is then calculated for all frames in a time interval of
approximately 10 seconds.
One advantage of J.343.1 is its focus on one display size, which allows inter-resolution
comparisons. In the YouTube J.343.1 implementation, each video is analyzed video
and scored as it would be watched on a 1080p HD screen. This allows the algorithm to

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Implementation of Video-MOS in QualiPoc


Using J.343.1 for YouTube Tests

be used precisely in a mobile streaming use case on a smartphone. Despite the video
resolution delivered by the YouTube server, the native video drivers on the smartphone
scale the received video frames up to the phones resolution. This is what the user
sees. The video quality algorithm does the same, that is, it receives a video in a certain
resolution and rates the video as if it were scaled to 1080p. This fixed upscaling allows
you compare video in different delivered resolutions and from smartphones with different display sizes.
Server
YouTube

Network
DASH

Smartphone
Mobile user client
'YouTube App'

Control

720p

Video upload
(for example,
HD720)

480p
Transcoding

Player
360p

Re-scaling to
phone display

240p

Upscaling to 1080p
Image analysis

MOS
modelling

Bitstream meta information

Video Quality J.343.1

Figure 4-2: Integration of J.343.1 for YouTube streaming on smart phones

The J.343.1 algorithm calculates and stores the Video MOS every few seconds and
stored. Since a YouTube session is longer than a few seconds, a series of Video MOS
values that describe the quality profile for the stream are available by the end of the
stream. This series show how the Video MOS values change over time and how it is
adapting to network conditions.
It has to be mentioned that this division of the stream into shorter parts for evaluation is
made in a very sophisticated way. It can be imagined as subsequently cutting the video
every few seconds instead of hard cuts every 10 seconds. The evaluation points are
chosen with some flexibility based on the content. Preferred MOS evaluation points are
when the resolution changes or a scene cuts to another scene. In case there is a preferred cutting point in this range, the next evaluation starts before a full synch frame is
cut.

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Implementation of Video-MOS in QualiPoc


Handling of Freezing, Still Images, and Black Frames

720p

480p
360p
240p

High

MOS

Avg MOS

Low
Figure 4-3: Principle of long-term MOS profile over a stream

As a next integration step, the weighted average Video MOS for the entire stream is
provided and can be used for direct quality comparison of different YouTube streaming
sessions.

4.3 Handling of Freezing, Still Images, and Black Frames


The difference between freezing and a still image is that freezing is unwanted and not
part of the source video. The video displays pauses, and since no new information is
arriving, the last frame remains on display for a longer time until video playback
resumes.
A still image is simply non-moving video content and an intentional part of the video.
The image can be a capture of a still scene before something happens or an insertion
of a logo, a phone number, or an address, which is common on YouTube.
A human viewer can easily differentiate between freezing and a still image, but a pure
image-based no-reference model cannot. This is a huge advantage for J.343.1. When
there is no movement on the screen, the parallel analysis of the incoming bit-stream

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Implementation of Video-MOS in QualiPoc


Example YouTube Video Quality Examples

allows it to differentiate between freezing (no new frames arriving) and still images
(new frames are arriving but the content is the same). This differentiation is unique for
no-reference models and enables safe freezing detection.
Another special effect in streaming video is frames without visible content, that is, a
sequence of black/very dark/mono-color frames or frames with barely visible content.
Such frames are marked but are not counted as an impairment since they belong to
the video content. They are even taken into account in the analysis of the frame rate or
the inter-frame difference.
The mono-color frames can also be white, for example, when very bright light leads to
white frames or for the blue frames introduced for synchronization in SwissQual reference videos.

4.4 Example YouTube Video Quality Examples


Since video quality is calculated under the assumption that the received video is displayed on a 1080p HD mobile screen, video received at a smaller resolution is upscaled to 1080p. The visual quality of a 1080p video without any visible coding distortions on such a screen is excellent, while a 720p video is a bit blurry due to it containing less spatial information in 720 lines than in 1080 lines. When a 360p or a 240p
video is up-scaled, the resulting picture is very blurry, even without any coding artefacts.
If a video is streamed from YouTube, coding impairments due to strong compression
are also present visible in addition to the pure reduction of resolution. This leads to a
further loss of spatial details so that the achieved quality in YouTube streaming tests is
lower than the maxima for a given resolution.
Table 4-1 presents some Video MOS ranges from tests performed at the beginning of
2015. The Video MOS is highly dependent on the content and the ranges must be
seen as an orientation for a medium complex video.
Table 4-1: Video MOS ranges
Resolution

w/o coding distortions

Typical on YouTube

240p

~3.0

2.0 - 2.8

360p

~3.6

2.5 - 3.3

480p

4.3

3.6 - 4.1

720p

4.6

3.8 - 4.2

1080p

4.8

4.2 - 4.5

If an arbitrary video from YouTube is selected, the resolution of the content and the
image might not match the resolution. Quite often widescreen videos are provided that
contain black bars at the top and bottom as known from TV. Therefore, even if a video
is flagged as 360p, the image height might only be 290 lines. This obviously influences
the video MOS and the stream will receive a score closer to a 240p video than a 360p
video.

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Implementation of Video-MOS in QualiPoc


Compatibility

4.5 Compatibility
The support of Video MOS on YouTube depends on the low-layer video driver and its
accessibility as well of the Android version of the phone. As a result, not all SwissQual
QualiPoc and Diversity 15.3 devices can provide Video MOS values.
For a list of compatible phones see the Diversity and QualiPoc 15.3 Release Notes or
contact our support center.
Please consult Chapter A, "Customer Support Center", on page 19 for the best
method to contact us.

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Customer Support Center

Annex
A Customer Support Center
Technical support where and when you need it
For quick, expert help with any Rohde & Schwarz equipment, contact one of our Customer Support Centers. A team of highly qualified engineers provides telephone support and will work with you to find a solution to your query on any aspect of the operation, programming or applications of Rohde & Schwarz equipment.
Up-to-date information and upgrades
To keep your instrument up-to-date and to be informed about new application notes
related to your instrument, please send an e-mail to the Customer Support Center stating your instrument and your wish. We will take care that you will get the right information.
Europe, Africa, Middle East

Phone +49 89 4129 12345


customersupport@rohde-schwarz.com

North America

Phone 1-888-TEST-RSA (1-888-837-8772)


customer.support@rsa.rohde-schwarz.com

Latin America

Phone +1-410-910-7988
customersupport.la@rohde-schwarz.com

Asia/Pacific

Phone +65 65 13 04 88
customersupport.asia@rohde-schwarz.com

China

Phone +86-800-810-8228 /
+86-400-650-5896
customersupport.china@rohde-schwarz.com

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