video format conversion

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Video format conversion [??]

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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. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Video format conversion

Video format conversionVideo format conversion

[??]

Page 2: Video format conversion

Format conversions

size change frame rate conversion (de)interlacing

Page 3: Video format conversion

Size change

Normally treated as a problem of image resizing; each image is processed separately

Page 4: Video format conversion

Interlaced signal

Similar to a spatial quinqunx…

Page 5: Video format conversion

Interlaced signal

Similarly, the spectrum of a quinqunx is this:

Page 6: Video format conversion

Interlaced signal

Ideal deinterlacing:

Page 7: Video format conversion

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)

Page 8: Video format conversion

Deinterlacing

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

Page 9: Video format conversion

Deinterlacing

Example of edge-dependent interpolation:

con

Page 10: Video format conversion

Deinterlacing

Example of VT median filter

Page 11: Video format conversion

Deinterlacing

Better: motion compensated temporal interpolation

Page 12: Video format conversion

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

Page 13: Video format conversion

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

Page 14: Video format conversion

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…

Page 15: Video format conversion

Scan rate doubling

Field repetition: te*=to

to*=te

Gives loss of resolutionFrame repetition te*=te

to*=to

generates artifacts if motion is present