Definition of compression ratio: Difference between two commercial JPEG2000 program libraries

  • Kil Joong Kim
  • , Bohyoung Kim
  • , Seung Wook Choi
  • , Young Hoon Kim
  • , Seokyung Hahn
  • , Tae Jung Kim
  • , Soon Joo Cha
  • , Vasundhara Bajpai
  • , Kyoung Ho Lee

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

The objective was to demonstrate the difference in the definition of compression ratio between two popular commercial JPEG 2000 program libraries. An institutional review board approved this study and waived informed consent. Using each of two JPEG 2000 libraries (libraries A and B), 20 abdomen computed tomography images with 12-bit depth (from scanner 1) and 20 images with 16-bit depth (from scanner 2) were compressed to three different nominal compression ratios: 10:1, 15:1, and 20:1. Achieved compression ratios (the original image file size to the compressed size) were compared with the nominal compression ratios using one-sample t-test tests. At each nominal compression level, the achieved compression ratios for scanner 1 images compressed using library A were approximately 1.33-fold greater than the nominal compression ratio (p < 0.0001), while the achieved compression ratios for the remaining three scanner-library combinations (scanner 1-library B, scanner 2-library A, and scanner 2-library B) were approximately the same as the nominal compression ratio (p-value range, 0.22-0.93). The definition of compression ratio is different between commercial JPEG 2000 program libraries. The definition should be standardized to facilitate the adoption and communication of an acceptable compression level.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)350-354
Number of pages5
JournalTelemedicine and e-Health
Volume14
Issue number4
DOIs
StatePublished - 1 May 2008
Externally publishedYes

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