This MSc is a challenging one-year taught Masters degree programme that provides students with a range of advanced topics drawn from image and video signal processing. The programme covers the techniques required for reliable wired and wireless image and video transmission (including associated enabling technologies). It provides an excellent opportunity to acquire the necessary skills to enter careers in some of the most dynamic fields in image and video communications.
This programme builds on the internationally recognised research strengths of the Signal Processing Group (SPG) within the Centre for Communications Research (CCR). The Group is highly regarded for combining fundamental research with strong industrial collaboration. It’s innovative research has resulted in world leading technology in the area of image and video analysis, coding and communication. The Group owns its own comprehensive video and image processing facility.
The MSc provides in-depth training in design, analysis and management skills relevant to the theory and practice of the image and video communications industry. The programme was accredited by the IET in 2008 and is one of only a handful of accredited programmes in this field.
Staff members are internationally recognised in their research fields and this is reflected in the unit contents. The facilities available within the Department for individual research projects are outstanding. Many students benefit from working with local industry and thereby attain skills which maximise their employability on graduation. Students have, for example, worked with Imagination Technologies, Sony, ProVision, ST Microelectronics, Thales and Texas Instruments. Our DSP lab specialises in video processing and hosts state-of-the-art-equipment provided by Texas Instruments.
The education, training and assessment of the MSc programmes extend over a 50-week period, starting October each year with the Introductory Week. During this week students meet the programme staff and their personal tutors. The taught modules and their associated assessment (including examinations) occur in the first 35 weeks and the research project runs full-time during the last 15 weeks of the programme. Research projects may be undertaken at the University, in collaboration with one of the programme’s many industrial supporters, or with a student's existing employer.
The taught material is presented over 2 semesters, each of 12 weeks' duration, excluding the Christmas and Easter vacations of 8 weeks in total. The examinations are held in May/June each year over a 3 week period. During the second semester the students are required to begin the background reading phase of their research project.
The taught material is arranged in units extending over a 12-week period (a semester) with 2 lectures per week, each of 50 minutes duration. The assessment of this material is via continuous assessment (usually laboratory assignments) and a formal examination. Each unit is worth 10 credit points (CP) and there are a total of 120 CP in the taught phase of each programme.
A list of the units for each programme is given in Table 1. The research project is worth 60 CP, thereby yielding a total of 180 CP.
|
Period |
Unit Code |
Unit Title |
Credit Points |
|---|---|---|---|
|
1 |
Coding Theory |
10 |
|
|
1 |
Research Methodology & Project Management |
10 |
|
|
1 |
Communication Systems |
10 |
|
|
1 |
Mobile Communications |
10 |
|
|
1 |
Networks and Protocols |
10 |
|
|
1 |
Digital Filters and Spectral Analysis |
10 |
|
|
2 |
Digital Signal Processing Systems |
10 |
|
|
2 |
Speech and Audio Processing |
10 |
|
|
2 |
Optimum Signal Processing |
10 |
|
|
2 |
Advance Mobile Radio Techniques |
10 |
|
|
2 |
Broadband Wireless Communications |
10 |
|
|
2 |
Image and Video Coding |
10 |
|
|
3 |
Research Project |
60 |
The programme is usually taken on a full-time basis (twelve months) but may be taken over an extended period (two twelve week blocks plus a separate project). The latter may be attractive to industrially sponsored students.