DocumentCode :
634433
Title :
On the visibility of flicker distortions in naturalistic videos
Author :
Lark Kwon Choi ; Cormack, Lawrence K. ; Bovik, Alan C.
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Electr. & Comput. Eng., Univ. of Texas at Austin, Austin, TX, USA
fYear :
2013
fDate :
3-5 July 2013
Firstpage :
164
Lastpage :
169
Abstract :
Motion can reduce the visibility of flicker distortions. We performed human subjective tests to investigate how motion influences the visibility of flicker distortions in naturalistic videos. Forty three naïve subjects participated in two tasks (“follow the moving object” and “view freely”) and reported their percepts on 36 test videos. Flicker distortions were simulated by periodic changes of video frames at different quality levels and flicker frequencies. An eye tracker was used to monitor each subject´s gaze. The results indicate that the visibility of flicker distortions is strongly reduced when the speed of coherent motion is large, and the effect is more pronounced when the video quality is poor. We conjecture that sufficiently fast and coherent motions near the gaze point mask or `silence´ the perception of flicker distortions in naturalistic videos in agreement with a recently observed `motion silencing´ effect on synthetic stimuli.
Keywords :
image motion analysis; video signal processing; coherent motion; eye tracker; flicker distortions; flicker frequencies; gaze point mask; human subjective test; motion silencing effect; naturalistic videos; quality levels; subject gaze; synthetic stimuli; video frames; video quality; Correlation; Distortion measurement; Mice; Quality assessment; Video recording; Videos; Visualization; Motion; flicker distortion; gaze; video quality; visibility of distortion;
fLanguage :
English
Publisher :
ieee
Conference_Titel :
Quality of Multimedia Experience (QoMEX), 2013 Fifth International Workshop on
Conference_Location :
Klagenfurt am Wo??rthersee
Type :
conf
DOI :
10.1109/QoMEX.2013.6603231
Filename :
6603231
Link To Document :
بازگشت