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Silver: an intelligent video editor

Published:31 March 2001Publication History

ABSTRACT

Silver is an authoring tool that allows novice users to edit digital video. A variety of AI techniques provide high-level metadata from the audio signal and video, including shot boundaries and a time-synchronized transcript. Silver uses this metadata to provide multiple, synchronized views of the content, including transcript, tree outline and hierarchical timeline views. These interface components are used to organize and edit the source material. The user can drag and drop representative frames or directly cut and paste in any view, including the transcript. Our work now focuses on supporting intelligent selection when there is a disparity between audio and video boundaries.

References

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  2. Girgensohn, A., Boreczky, J., et al., A Semi-automatic Approach to Home Video Editing, UIST "00 Conference Proceedings, ACM Press, pp. 81-89, 2000. Google ScholarGoogle ScholarDigital LibraryDigital Library
  3. Mills, M., Cohen, J. and Wong, Y., A Magnifier Tool for Video Data. CHI '92 Conference Proceedings, ACM Press, pp. 93-98, 1992. Google ScholarGoogle ScholarDigital LibraryDigital Library
  4. Ueda, H., Miyatake, T., Sumino, S. and Nagasake, A. Automatic Structure Visualization for Video Editing, INTERCHI '93, ACM Press, pp. 137-141, 1993. Google ScholarGoogle ScholarDigital LibraryDigital Library
  5. Wactlar, H., Christel, M. G., et al., Lessons Learned from Building a Terabyte Digital Video Library, IEEE Computer, (32) 2, pp. 66-73, 1999 Google ScholarGoogle ScholarDigital LibraryDigital Library

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              • Published in

                cover image ACM Conferences
                CHI EA '01: CHI '01 Extended Abstracts on Human Factors in Computing Systems
                March 2001
                544 pages
                ISBN:1581133405
                DOI:10.1145/634067

                Copyright © 2001 ACM

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                Association for Computing Machinery

                New York, NY, United States

                Publication History

                • Published: 31 March 2001

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