In recent times, there has been a significant focus on digital compression. The purpose of this study is to undertake a comparative evaluation and examination of the efficacy of the latest standards, namely HEVC, AVI, and its successor VVC. The determination of which standard to utilize relies heavily on factors such as the inherent characteristics of the video, its functionalities, quantization parameters, image quality, as well as the size and video content, this latter, is often classified by spatio-temporal complexity using spatial and temporal information (SI/TI). In reality, they are mostly used for original video sources. The efficiency of encoding original video sources is unknown. The results show that each standard has characteristics that sometimes make it superior to others. In addition, We observe that By understanding how SI and TI affect encoding efficiency, we will be able to better optimize the encoding process and reduce the amount of data that needs to be stored, transmitted, and processed. This could help to reduce the amount of time and energy required to encode video content, as well as reduce the amount of storage space needed to store it. Compared to H.265/HEVC, AV1 is more efficient at compressing HD and FHD video, and more efficient for SD video. In addition, experiments show that VVC/H.266 has higher compression efficiency.
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