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by M. Nithya

Learning Techniques for Video Shot Detection. by M. Nithya. Under the guidance of Prof. Sharat Chandran. Outline. Introduction Types of Shot-break Previous approaches to Shot Detection General Approach - pixel comparison, histogram comparison…

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by M. Nithya

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  1. Learning Techniques for Video Shot Detection by M. Nithya Under the guidance of Prof. Sharat Chandran

  2. Outline • Introduction • Types of Shot-break • Previous approaches to Shot Detection • General Approach - pixel comparison, histogram comparison… • Recent Work – Temporal slice analysis, Cue Video • Our Proposed approaches • Supervised Learning using AdaBoost algorithm • Unsupervised Learning using clustering • Semi-supervised Learning combining AdaBoost & clustering • Conclusion

  3. Introduction • 9,000 hours of motion pictures are produced around the world every year. • 3,000 television stations broadcasting for twenty-four hours a day produce eight million hours of video per year. Problems: • Searching the video • Retrieving the relevant information Solution: Break down the video into smaller manageable parts called “Shots”

  4. What is Shot? • Shot is the result of uninterrupted camera work • Shot-break is the transition from one shot to the next

  5. Types of Shot-Break

  6. Shot-Break Dissolve Wipe Fade Hard Cut

  7. Hard Cut

  8. Fade

  9. Dissolve

  10. Wipe

  11. Shot Detection Methods

  12. Shot Detection Methods Goal: To segment video into shots Two ways: • Cluster the similar frames to identify shots • Find the shots that differ and declare it as shot-break

  13. Pervious Approaches to Shot Detection • General Approaches • Pixel Comparison • Block-based approach • Histogram Comparison • Edge Change Ratio • Recent Work • Temporal Slice Analysis • Cue Video

  14. Pixel Comparison Frame N + 1 Frame N X Y x=1y=1 | Pi(x,y) – Pi+1(x,y) | D(i,i+1)= XY

  15. Block – Based Approach Frame N + 1 Frame N Compares statistics of the corresponding blocks Counts the number of significantly different blocks

  16. Histogram Comparison

  17. Edge Change Ratio

  18. Comparison…

  19. Problems with previous approaches  Can’t distinguish shot-breaks with • Fast object motion or Camera motion • Fast Illumination changes • Reflections from glass, water • Flash photography  Fails to detect long and short gradual transitions

  20. Temporal – Slice Analysis

  21. Temporal – Slice Analysis

  22. Cue Video

  23. Temporal – Slice Analysis

  24. Cue Video • Graph based approach • Each frame maps to a node • Connected upto 1, 3 or 7 frames apart • Each node is associated with • color Histogram • Edge Histogram • Weights of the edges represent similarity measure between the two frames • Graph partitioning will segment the video into shots

  25. Proposed Approaches

  26. Proposed Approaches Use learning techniques to distinguish between shot-break and • Fast object motion or Camera motion • Fast Illumination changes • Reflections from glass, water • Flash photography

  27. Supervised Learning

  28. Feature Extraction • 25 Primitive features like edge, color are extracted directly from the image • These 25 features are used as input to next round of feature extraction yielding 25 x 25 = 625 features • This 625 features can be used as input to compute 625 x 625 = 15, 625 features

  29. How these features can be used to classify images?

  30. Solution : Use AdaBoost to select these features. Oops!! There are 15, 625 features! Applying them to red, green and blue separately will result in 46, 875 features! Can we find few important features that will help to distinguish the images?

  31. AdaBoost Algorithm Input: (x1,y1) (x2,y2) …(xm,ym) where x1,x2,…xm are the images yi = 0,1 for negative and positive examples Let n and p be the number of positive and negative examples Initial weight w1,i = 1/2n if yi= 0 and w1,I = 1/2p if yi = 1 For t= 1,…T: Train one hypothesis hi(x) for each feature and find the error Choose the hypothesis with low error value update the weight: wt+1,i = wt,i * t1-et where ei=0,1for xi classified incorrectly or correctly t=et/(1-et) Normalize wt+1,I so that it is a distribution Final hypothesis is calculated as

  32. Supervised Learning • Extract Highly selective features • AdaBoost algorithm to select few important features • Train the method to detect different shot-breaks

  33. Unsupervised techniques Clustering

  34. Unsupervised technique - clustering

  35. Unsupervised technique - clustering Hard Cut Dissolve

  36. Unsupervised technique • Clustering method to cluster into shots • Relevance Feedback

  37. Semi-supervised Learning

  38. Semi-supervised Learning Combination of Supervised and Unsupervised Few labeled data are available, using which it works on large unlabeled video Steps: • AdaBoost algorithm to select features • Clustering method to cluster into shots • Relevance Feedback

  39. Conclusion…

  40. Conclusion… Problems with previous approaches: • Can’t distinguish shot-breaks with • Fast object motion or Camera motion • Fast Illumination changes • Reflections from glass, water • Flash photography • Fails to detect long and short gradual transitions Planning to use AdaBoost learning based clustering scheme for shot-detection

  41. Thank you… 

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