Date: 7/03/2013 12:23:47
From: Bubblecar
ID: 275734
Subject: Eulerian Video Magnification

Interesting new imaging technique (video at link):

A 30-second video of a newborn baby shows the infant silently snoozing in its crib, his breathing barely perceptible. But when the video is run through an algorithm that can amplify both movement and color, the baby’s face blinks crimson with each tiny heartbeat.

The amplification process is called Eulerian Video Magnification, and is the brainchild of a team of scientists at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology’s Computer Science and Artificial Intelligence Laboratory.

The team originally developed the program to monitor neonatal babies without making physical contact. But they quickly learned that the algorithm can be applied to other videos to reveal changes imperceptible to the naked eye. Prof. William T. Freeman, a leader on the team, imagines its use in search and rescue, so that rescuers could tell from a distance if someone trapped on a ledge, say, is still breathing.

“Once we amplify these small motions, there’s like a whole new world you can look at,” he said.

Full Report: http://bits.blogs.nytimes.com/2013/02/27/scientists-uncover-invisible-motion-in-video/?smid=tw-nytimesbits&seid=auto

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Date: 7/03/2013 13:01:35
From: morrie
ID: 275755
Subject: re: Eulerian Video Magnification

Euler lives on! Even the other great mathematicians thought he was the supremo.

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Date: 9/03/2013 07:41:32
From: morrie
ID: 276850
Subject: re: Eulerian Video Magnification

You can upload a video of your own and have the technique applied to it and see the results. I think they are offering this service to seek out applications of the technique.

http://videoscope.qrclab.com/vidproc.html

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Date: 9/03/2013 07:46:49
From: morrie
ID: 276854
Subject: re: Eulerian Video Magnification

morrie said:


You can upload a video of your own and have the technique applied to it and see the results. I think they are offering this service to seek out applications of the technique.

http://videoscope.qrclab.com/vidproc.html


http://videoscope.qrclab.com/

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