1 / 15

Video format conversion

Video format conversion. [??]. Format conversions. size change frame rate conversion (de)interlacing. Size change. Normally treated as a problem of image resizing; each image is processed separately. Interlaced signal. Similar to a spatial quinqunx…. Interlaced signal.

Download Presentation

Video format conversion

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Video format conversion [??]

  2. Format conversions • size change • frame rate conversion • (de)interlacing

  3. Size change • Normally treated as a problem of image resizing; each image is processed separately

  4. Interlaced signal • Similar to a spatial quinqunx…

  5. Interlaced signal • Similarly, the spectrum of a quinqunx is this:

  6. Interlaced signal • Ideal deinterlacing:

  7. Deinterlacing • In the areas without motion, the ideal process is temporal interpolation • Where there is motion, I can interpolate spatially • Or, better (but more difficult), to use motion compensated temporal interpolation (see later)

  8. Deinterlacing • A video-temporal (VT) interpolation filter would theoretically solve the problem, if the signal were bandlimited prior to interlacing

  9. Deinterlacing • Example of edge-dependent interpolation: con

  10. Deinterlacing • Example of VT median filter

  11. Deinterlacing • Better: motion compensated temporal interpolation

  12. Frame rate conversion From film (24 fps) to TV (PAL/Secam) - the film is accelerated (24 -> 25 fps) and each image is shown twice -> 50 fps Not in the USA (60 field/s ,actually 29.97x2)-> telecine - 12 field are added every 24 frame -> 60 fps: 2-3 pull-down: - the film is slowed (24 -> 23.976) - the third B is often omitted in DVDs (its equal to the 1st): 480i24 format, and the DVD adds it on-the-fly - similarly, 3-2 pull-down: AAABBCCCDD

  13. Frame rate conversion ... and if we need to return to progressive, 60fps: two ways Weaving takes two successive interlaced fields and reinterleaves them to create a progressive frame - works well - if the original material was progressive, like a film that has undergone the 2:3-pulldown process, and - provided the disc tells the player that it was. Bobbing, the normal process for generating a progressive signal from interlaced video, takes a single field and creates a full progressive frame from it by line doubling or line interpolation

  14. Frame rate conversion If the original material was interlaced video, not 2:3-pulldown film, weaving can cause artifacts More advanced progressive-scan conversion systems combine bobbing and weaving, depending on the content (motion…) of the image. If the monitor is 72 Hz: simply AAABBBCCCDDD…

  15. Scan rate doubling Field repetition: te*=to to*=te Gives loss of resolution Frame repetition te*=te to*=to generates artifacts if motion is present

More Related