Video Tapestries with Continuous Temporal Zoom
ACM Transactions on Graphics (Proc. SIGGRAPH), August 2010
Abstract
We present a novel approach for summarizing video in the form
of a multiscale image that is continuous in both the spatial domain
and across the scale dimension: There are no hard borders
between discrete moments in time, and a user can zoom smoothly
into the image to reveal additional temporal details. We call these
artifacts tapestries because their continuous nature is akin to medieval
tapestries and other narrative depictions predating the advent
of motion pictures. We propose a set of criteria for such a summarization,
and a series of optimizations motivated by these criteria.
These can be performed as an entirely offline computation to
produce high quality renderings, or by adjusting some optimization
parameters the later stages can be solved in real time, enabling
an interactive interface for video navigation. Our video tapestries
combine the best aspects of two common visualizations, providing
the visual clarity of DVD chapter menus with the information density
and multiple scales of a video editing timeline representation.
In addition, they provide continuous transitions between zoom levels.
In a user study, participants preferred both the aesthetics and
efficiency of tapestries over other interfaces for visual browsing.
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Additional Links
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Citation
Connelly Barnes, Dan B Goldman, Eli Shechtman, and Adam Finkelstein.
"Video Tapestries with Continuous Temporal Zoom."
ACM Transactions on Graphics (Proc. SIGGRAPH) 29(3), August 2010.
BibTeX
@article{Barnes:2010:VTW, author = "Connelly Barnes and Dan B Goldman and Eli Shechtman and Adam Finkelstein", title = "Video Tapestries with Continuous Temporal Zoom", journal = "ACM Transactions on Graphics (Proc. SIGGRAPH)", year = "2010", month = aug, volume = "29", number = "3" }