3D Broadcast Formats

Now that 3D broadcasts have begun in earnest with the World Cup on ESPN, I'd like to explain how this system works. It's not the same as Blu-ray 3D, which I'll cover in a future blog.

One of the biggest problems faced by broadcasters is how to fit a 3D datastream—which includes two complete images—into the same bandwidth occupied by a single-image 2D stream. The answer is simple, if somewhat disquieting—split the available resolution between the left and right images, giving each of them half the resolution of a 2D image.

There are basically three ways to do this, all of which fall under the moniker frame-compatible spatial compression. The process involves two steps—pixel sub-sampling or filtering (determines which pixels are used to represent the left and right images) and frame packing (determines how the left and right pixels are organized in the transmitted frame).


Courtesy Insight Media

One sub-sampling technique uses alternating rows of pixels to represent the left and right images, which resembles interlacing. Once the image is sampled, the pixels are "packed" so the left image occupies the top half of the pixel array and the right image occupies the bottom half; thus, this format is called top-bottom or over-under.

In this case, the vertical resolution of each image is cut in half. Over-under works well for 720p or 1080p signals, but not for 1080i signals, because removing rows in an interlaced signal results in more artifacts. And since most HDTV is broadcast at 1080i, this format is not likely to be used for 3D programs.


Courtesy Insight Media

Another approach is to use alternating columns of pixels to represent the left and right images and then pack the left pixels in the left half of the frame and the right pixels in the right half. This format is called, appropriately enough, side-by-side. In this case, the horizontal resolution of each image is cut in half, and there are fewer artifacts than over-under with interlaced signals, so it will be used by most 3D broadcasts, including the World Cup.


Courtesy Insight Media

The third option is to represent the left and right images with pixels in a checkerboard pattern, which is called checkerboard or quincunx sub-sampling. (A weird word, I know, but there it is.) The pixels are then packed side-by-side or over-under for transmission.

Checkerboard compression can exhibit more artifacts than either of the other two formats, at least without enhancement metadata as supplied by codecs from companies such as Sensio, Dolby, and RealD. If a TV doesn't include the corresponding decoder, any enhancement metadata is ignored and artifacts abound, which is why the checkerboard format is not likely to be used in 3D broadcasting.

Interestingly, checkerboard-sampled data can be sent directly to a 3D DLP display without side-by-side or over-under packing. In fact, Mitsubishi's new 3D adaptor accepts any of the other formats and converts it to checkerboard before sending it to the company's 3D RPTVs.

Whichever format is used to broadcast the 3D image, your TV must understand it and "unpack" the data in order to display both images separated by what is called the interocular distance, which more or less matches the distance between your eyes. And because 3D TVs display the images in a frame-sequential manner—that is, the left and right images are displayed alternately with active shutter glasses—they must also reconstruct the pixels missing from each image in the broadcast signal.

From the few 3D broadcasts I've seen so far, it's not as good as Blu-ray 3D, which sends the left and right images each with full resolution and no pixel interpolation. In the 3D broadcasts I've seen, there seems to be more motion blur and stuttering than Blu-ray 3D exhibits, and the image doesn't "hang together" quite as well. Of course, this could be due to factors other than the frame-compatible formats that must be used to accommodate the existing broadcast infrastructure, and I hope to get a 3D-broadcast source in the studio very soon so I can spend more time with it.

COMMENTS
Jarod's picture

Very interesting. Good article Scott!

Kurt's picture

So how does it compare resolution wise with HDTV, 2D Blu-ray, and standard DVDs?

Scott Wilkinson's picture

Kurt, conventional HDTV broadcasts have a resolution of 1920x1080 (sent as 1080i) or 1280x720 (sent as 720p). Blu-ray has a resolution of 1920x1080 (usually sent as 1080p). DVD has a much lower resolution of 720x480 (sent as 480i, though most modern players deinterlace to 480p). By comparison, over-under 3D provides a resolution of 1920x540 per eye, while side-by-side provides 960x1080 per eye. The TV then "upscales" each eye's image to 1920x1080 by interpolating the missing pixels. (Mitsubishi RPTVs do not fill in the missing pixels in their checkerboard pattern.) As you can see, 3D broadcasts provide greater resolution for each eye than DVD, but not as much resolution as Blu-ray or 2D HDTV.

John J Monaco's picture

Thanks for the info on 3dtv I have a mitsi 60 3d ready Tv. will mitsi have their own 3d blueray player to compliment the rest of their 3d kit... Also using a 4dtv satellite receiver the Aspect ratio cannot display a 16:9 so the standard setting on my mitsi makes the carecters and objects wider than normal other settings except for the narrow (lose the full screen)don't make it .playing dvd or blueray disc's (fabulous picture)work fine. Is their any procuct out there that will covert the aspect ratio to 16.9

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