shot boundary
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2021 ◽  
pp. 4181-4194
Author(s):  
Eman Hato

Shot boundary detection is the process of segmenting a video into basic units known as shots by discovering transition frames between shots. Researches have been conducted to accurately detect the shot boundaries. However, the acceleration of the shot detection process with higher accuracy needs improvement. A new method was introduced in this paper to find out the boundaries of abrupt shots in the video with high accuracy and lower computational cost. The proposed method consists of two stages. First, projection features were used to distinguish non boundary transitions and candidate transitions that may contain abrupt boundary. Only candidate transitions were conserved for next stage. Thus, the speed of shot detection was improved by reducing the detection scope. In the second stage, the candidate segments were refined using motion feature derived from the optical flow to remove non boundary frames. The results manifest that the proposed method achieved excellent detection accuracy (0.98 according to F-Score) and effectively speeded up detection process. In addition, the comparative analysis results confirmed the superior performance of the proposed method versus other methods.


2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (16) ◽  
pp. 7266
Author(s):  
Krishna Kumar Thirukokaranam Chandrasekar ◽  
Steven Verstockt

Technological advancement, in addition to the pandemic, has given rise to an explosive increase in the consumption and creation of multimedia content worldwide. This has motivated people to enrich and publish their content in a way that enhances the experience of the user. In this paper, we propose a context-based structure mining pipeline that not only attempts to enrich the content, but also simultaneously splits it into shots and logical story units (LSU). Subsequently, this paper extends the structure mining pipeline to re-ID objects in broadcast videos such as SOAPs. We hypothesise the object re-ID problem of SOAP-type content to be equivalent to the identification of reoccurring contexts, since these contexts normally have a unique spatio-temporal similarity within the content structure. By implementing pre-trained models for object and place detection, the pipeline was evaluated using metrics for shot and scene detection on benchmark datasets, such as RAI. The object re-ID methodology was also evaluated on 20 randomly selected episodes from broadcast SOAP shows New Girl and Friends. We demonstrate, quantitatively, that the pipeline outperforms existing state-of-the-art methods for shot boundary detection, scene detection, and re-identification tasks.


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