Low Noise Reversible MDCT (RMDCT) And Its Application In Progressive-To-Lossless Embedded Audio Coding

  • Jin Li

IEEE Transactions on Signal Processing |

Published by IEEE

Publication

A reversible transform converts an integer input to an integer output, while retaining the ability to reconstruct the exact input from the output sequence. It is one of the key components for lossless and progressive-to-lossless audio codecs. In this work, we investigate the desired characteristics of a high-performance reversible transform. Specifically, we show that the smaller the quantization noise of the reversible modified discrete cosine transform (RMDCT), the better the compression performance of the lossless and progressive-to-lossless codec that utilizes the transform. Armed with this knowledge, we develop a number of RMDCT solutions. The first RMDCT solution is implemented by turning every rotation module of a float MDCT (FMDCT) into a reversible rotation, which uses multiple factorizations to further reduce the quantization noise. The second and third solutions use the matrix lifting to implement a reversible fast Fourier transform (FFT) and a reversible fractional-shifted FFT, respectively, which are further combined with the reversible rotations to form the RMDCT. With the matrix lifting, we can design the RMDCT that has less quantization noise and can still be computed efficiently. A progressive-to-lossless embedded audio codec (PLEAC) employing the RMDCT is implemented with superior results for both lossless and lossy audio compression.