Retinal-resolution Extended Reality (XR) video demands raw bitrates approaching 157 Gbps, far exceeding the 100 kbps–2 Mbps per-user budgets available in satellite and high-latency networks. Prior work on Geometric Rate–Distortion Alignment (GRDA) introduced Hyperbolic Foveated Warping (HFW) as a signal-geometry layer to redistribute spatial information density according to human retinal acuity. However, empirical and analytical evaluation reveals a structural failure mode, termed Magnification Debt: the coupling of foveal scaling and peripheral compression through a single parameter induces an irreducible geometric error at the gaze center, leading to a degenerate rate–distortion regime in which foveal quality becomes invariant to bitrate. This work introduces Stable Geometric Capacity Reallocation (SGCR), a unified theoretical framework that resolves this limitation through five formal constraints: bounded discrete capacity, foveal identity preservation, digital diffeomorphism, C² smoothness, and adaptive anti-aliasing. SGCR is instantiated via the Piecewise Smoothstep Radial Transform (PSRT), a three-zone bounded diffeomorphic mapping composed of an identity core, a Hermite spline transition, and a hyperbolic periphery aligned with the Watson retinal ganglion cell density model. We prove that PSRT eliminates Magnification Debt by construction, guaranteeing exact foveal signal preservation (|J(0)| = 1), globally bounded Jacobians, discrete invertibility, and O(1) GPU LUT-based inverse decoding within real-time constraints. Experimental results confirm that, unlike HFW (which systematically produces C/P < 1 and degenerate R–D behavior), PSRT achieves stable foveated compression with central-to-peripheral quality ratios consistently greater than one and near-lossless foveal reconstruction. Phase 1 synthetic experiments demonstrate −68% to −83% foveal BD-rate reductions relative to ERP-HEVC at matched foveal quality. Phase 2 validation on real 4K video confirms consistent bitrate savings in the range of 15–27%, with negligible foveal quality deviation and statistically preserved perceptual fidelity. Additional causality and attribution experiments show that foveal identity (C2) is the necessary condition for perceptual correctness, while adaptive anti-aliasing (C5) is responsible for the transition from bitrate overhead to net compression gain. SGCR establishes a principled shift from bitrate optimization to geometric capacity reallocation, defining the signal-geometry layer as a fundamental and necessary component for perceptually aligned immersive video compression systems, particularly under high-latency and bandwidth-constrained conditions.
Building similarity graph...
Analyzing shared references across papers
Loading...
Eric Gustavo Reis de Sena
Building similarity graph...
Analyzing shared references across papers
Loading...
Eric Gustavo Reis de Sena (Thu,) studied this question.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/69be38216e48c4981c678562 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.19111371