4.6 Article

PSNR vs SSIM: imperceptibility quality assessment for image steganography

Journal

MULTIMEDIA TOOLS AND APPLICATIONS
Volume 80, Issue 6, Pages 8423-8444

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s11042-020-10035-z

Keywords

Imperceptibility; Image Quality assessment; Image steganography; PSNR; SSIM; Image histogram

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PSNR and SSIM are widely used measuring tools in image quality assessment, with PSNR used earlier and SSIM designed based on human visual system factors. Research findings show that LSB performs best based on PSNR, while PVD performs best based on SSIM. The study concludes that SSIM is a better measure of imperceptibility in all aspects and should be preferred in future steganographic research.
Peak signal to noise ratio (PSNR) and structural index similarity (SSIM) are two measuring tools that are widely used in image quality assessment. Especially in the steganography image, these two measuring instruments are used to measure the quality of imperceptibility. PSNR is used earlier than SSIM, is easy, has been widely used in various digital image measurements, and has been considered tested and valid. SSIM is a newer measurement tool that is designed based on three factors i.e. luminance, contrast, and structure to better suit the workings of the human visual system. Some research has discussed the correlation and comparison of these two measuring tools, but no research explicitly discusses and suggests which measurement tool is more suitable for steganography. This study aims to review, prove, and analyze the results of PSNR and SSIM measurements on three spatial domain image steganography methods, i.e. LSB, PVD, and CRT. Color images were chosen as container images because human vision is more sensitive to color changes than grayscale changes. Based on the test results found several opposing findings, where LSB has the most superior value based on PSNR and PVD get the most superior value based on SSIM. Additionally, the changes based on the histogram are more noticeable in LSB and CRT than in PVD. Other analyzes such as RS attack also show results that are more in line with SSIM measurements when compared to PSNR. Based on the results of testing and analysis, this research concludes that SSIM is a better measure of imperceptibility in all aspects and it is preferable that in the next steganographic research at least use SSIM.

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