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Motion compensation in computing, is an algorithmic technique used to predict a frame in a video, given the previous and/or future frames by accounting for motion of the camera and/or objects in the video. It is employed in the encoding of video data for video compression, for example in the generation of MPEG-2 files.
Figure 1. Two-stage video compression. Motion compensation [5] has been used widely in video compression, because of its abilities to exploit high temporal correlation between successive frames of an image sequence. Motion compensation mainly consists of two parts: motion estimation [6] and prediction error coding.
In MPEG I, the motion compensation process is block based and is performed on the basis of blocks of 16x16 pixels. Motion compensated interpolation (also called bidirectional prediction in MPEG I terminology) is a key feature of MPEG I.
Motion compensation for MPEG-2 is more complex due to the introduction of fields. After a macroblock has been compressed using motion compensation, it contains both the spatial difference (motion vectors) and content difference (error terms) between the reference macroblock and macroblock being coded.
Motion compensation in computing, is an algorithmic technique used to predict a frame in a video, given the previous and/or future frames by accounting for motion of the camera and/or objects in the video. It is employed in the encoding of video data for video compression, for example in the generation of MPEG-2 files.