Abstract

The human eye cannot see subtle motion signals that fall outside human visual limits, due to either limited resolution of intensity variations or lack of sensitivity to lower spatial and temporal frequencies. Yet, these invisible signals can be highly informative when amplified to be observable by a human operator or an automatic machine vision system. Many video magnification techniques have recently been proposed to magnify and reveal these signals in videos and image sequences. Limitations, including noise level, video quality and long execution time, are associated with the existing video magnification techniques. Therefore, there is value in developing a new magnification method where these issues are the main consideration. This study presents a new magnification method that outperforms other magnification techniques in terms of noise removal, video quality at large magnification factor and execution time. The proposed method is compared with four methods, including Eulerian video magnification, phase-based video magnification, Riesz pyramid for fast phase-based video magnification and enhanced Eulerian video magnification. The experimental results demonstrate the superior performance of the proposed magnification method regarding all video quality metrics used. Our method is also 60–70% faster than Eulerian video magnification, whereas other competing methods take longer to execute than Eulerian video magnification.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call