Continuous in situ marine holographic observation generates data volumes that challenge onboard storage and transmission. Parallel phase-shifting digital holography (PPSDH) is especially sensitive to compression because phase retrieval depends on consistent four-channel demodulation. We present a training-free spatiotemporal compression framework for sparse-particle marine PPSDH sequences based on background–residual decomposition and a shared four-channel processing path. The background is coded once per temporal window by a discrete wavelet transform (DWT) followed by principal component analysis (PCA), and the dynamic residual is decorrelated by temporal principal component analysis before quantization and entropy coding. The framework is evaluated on three primary 64-frame marine PPSDH sequences using a common reconstruction-and-evaluation pipeline with wrapped-phase root-mean-square error (PhaseRMSE) as the primary metric and amplitude peak signal-to-noise ratio (PSNR) and structural similarity (SSIM) as secondary references; expanded supplementary checks are also reported for nine additional selected 64-frame groups spanning sparse to transitional occupancy. On the primary sequence and within the high-fidelity achieved-rate overlap with the JPEG Pleno anchor codec INTERFERE, the proposed framework reduces PhaseRMSE by about 3.3-fold to 3.4-fold while increasing amplitude PSNR by about 11 dB and preserving amplitude SSIM above 0.99997. Lower-bitrate sweeps further quantify the rate–fidelity trade-off rather than claiming universal low-rate superiority. These results support BG–Res spatiotemporal coding as a practical phase-fidelity-oriented option for the tested sparse-to-transitional marine PPSDH conditions; extension to dense scenes, broader marine conditions, and downstream biological tasks requires separate validation.
Liu et al. (Wed,) studied this question.