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1. Optical flow estimation using temporally oversampled video
Lim, S.; Apostolopoulos, J.G.; Gamal, A.E.;
Image Processing, IEEE Transactions on
Volume 14,  Issue 8,  Aug. 2005 Page(s):1074 - 1087
Abstract:

Recent advances in imaging sensor technology make high frame-rate video capture practical. As demonstrated in previous work, this capability can be used to enhance the performance of many image and video processing applications. The idea is to use the high frame-rate capability to temporally oversample the scene and, thus, to obtain more accurate information about scene motion and illumination. This information is then used to improve the performance of image and standard frame-rate video applications. This paper investigates the use of temporal oversampling to improve the accuracy of optical flow estimation (OFE). A method for obtaining high accuracy optical flow estimates at a conventional standard frame rate, e.g., 30 frames/s, by first capturing and processing a high frame-rate version of the video is presented. The method uses the Lucas-Kanade algorithm to obtain optical flow estimates at a high frame rate, which are then accumulated and refined to estimate the optical flow at the desired standard frame rate. The method demonstrates significant improvements in OFE accuracy both on synthetically generated video sequences and on a real video sequence captured using an experimental high-speed imaging system. It is then shown that a key benefit of using temporal oversampling to estimate optical flow is the reduction in motion aliasing. Using sinusoidal input sequences, the reduction in motion aliasing is identified and the desired minimum sampling rate as a function of the velocity and spatial bandwidth of the scene is determined. Using both synthetic and real video sequences, it is shown that temporal oversampling improves OFE accuracy by reducing motion aliasing not only for areas with large displacements but also for areas with small displacements and high spatial frequencies. The use of other OFE algorithms with temporally oversampled video is then discussed. In particular, the Haussecker algorithm is extended to work with high frame-rate sequences. This extens- - ion demonstrates yet another important bene
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