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2001 IEEE International Conference on Multimedia and Expo (ICME'01)
AUTOMATED FILM RHYTHM EXTRACTION FOR SCENE ANALYSIS
Tokyo, Japan
August 22-August 25
ISBN: 0-7695-1198-8
Brett Adams, Curtin University of Technology
Chitra Dorai, IBM T. J. Watson Research Center
Svetha Venkatesh, Curtin University of Technology
This paper examines film rhythm, an important expressive element in motion pictures, based on our ongoing study to exploit film grammar as a broad computational framework for the task of automated film and video understanding. Of the many, more or less elusive, narrative devices contributing to film rhythm, this paper discusses motion characteristics that form the basis of our analysis, and presents novel computational models for extracting rhythmic patterns induced through a perception of motion. In our rhythm model, motion behaviour is classified as being either nonexistent, fluid or staccato for a given shot. Shot neighbourhoods in movies are then grouped by proportional makeup of these motion behavioural classes to yield seven high-level rhythmic arrangements that prove to be adept at indicating likely scene content (e.g. dialogue or chase sequence) in our experiments. Underlying causes for this level of codification in our approach are postulated from film grammar, and are accompanied by detailed demonstration from real movies for the purposes of clarification.
Citation:
Brett Adams, Chitra Dorai, Svetha Venkatesh, "AUTOMATED FILM RHYTHM EXTRACTION FOR SCENE ANALYSIS," icme, pp.216, 2001 IEEE International Conference on Multimedia and Expo (ICME'01), 2001
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