U.S. patents available from 1976 to present.
U.S. patent applications available from 2005 to present.

Method of compressing digital image data and device thereof

Patent 5293252 Issued on March 8, 1994. Estimated Expiration Date: Icon_subject March 4, 2012. Estimated Expiration Date is calculated based on simple USPTO term provisions. It does not account for terminal disclaimers, term adjustments, failure to pay maintenance fees, or other factors which might affect the term of a patent.

Patent References

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Inventor: Hatori ,   et al.

4920426

Device for coding a picture signal by compression
Patent #: 5051840
Issued on: 09/24/1991
Inventor: Watanabe, et al.

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Patent #: 5113256
Issued on: 05/12/1992
Inventor: Citta, et al.

Device for coding a picture signal by compression
Patent #: 5126857
Issued on: 06/30/1992
Inventor: Watanabe, et al.

Histogram/variance mechanism for detecting presence of an edge within block of image data
Patent #: 5150433
Issued on: 09/22/1992
Inventor: Daly

Coding method for increasing data compression efficiency in transmitting or storing picture signals
Patent #: 5162908
Issued on: 11/10/1992
Inventor: Kim

System for compression and decompression of video data using discrete cosine transform and coding techniques Patent #: 5196946
Issued on: 03/23/1993
Inventor: Balkanski, et al.

Inventors

Assignee

Application

No. 845701 filed on 03/04/1992

US Classes:

382/250, Discrete cosine or sine transform382/246, Huffman or variable-length coding382/251Quantization

Examiners

Primary: Ro, Bentsu

Attorney, Agent or Firm

International Class

H04N 001/415

Foreign Application Priority Data

1991-03-27 KR

Abstract

A method of compressing digital image data and a device thereof of coding digital image data within constant rate data not deteriorating a resolution of an image without regard to a complexity of digital image data. A format of M×N pixel blocks (where M, N are natural numbers) is made from luminance and sub-sampled chrominance signals, and first to fourth edge values TY, TR-Y, TB-Y, Ai respectively from the luminance, sub-sampled signals and the blocks are detected. A quantization scaling factor is determined by normalizing the first edge value, and the number of bits corresponding to the each block is allocated according to the first to fourth edge values. The number of AC (alternating current) factor bits is allocated by subtracting the number of DC (direct current) factor bits of the each block coded by a one-dimensional Huffman coding from the number of the allocation bits.

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