3:2
Pull-down
Method used to map the 24fps of film onto the 30fps (60
fields) of 525 line NTSC video, so that one film frame
occupies three video fields, the next two, etc. In this way
the film can play at a standard video rate. It means the two
fields of every other video frame come from different film
frames, this can cause problems in the editing process.
4:1:1
Sampling
A ratio used to describe the sampling frequency of a
digitized signal. The ratio describes luminance as being
sampled 4 times at 3.37 MHz, while color is sampled 1 time
at 3.37 MHz in each of it's separate parts. DV,DVCAM and
DVCPRO25 use 4:1:1 color sampling. Formulated as:Y
(luminance) is sampled at 13.5 MHz (or 3.37 x 4), R-Y
(color) is sampled at 3.37 MHz (or 3.37 x 1), B-Y
(color) is sampled at 3.37 MHz (or 3.37 x 1) equals
4:1:1.
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AGC (Automatic
Gain Control)
Circuitry that automatically adjusts the gain level
providing optimum signal output and preventing potentially
damaging circuit overload. AGC circuits are used in cameras
and recording devices to maintain proper signal levels
without requiring an operator to manually monitor controls.
Aliasing
During the quantization or re-quantization process,
unnecessary artifacts may be generated due to interpolation
(a method for generating inter-sample data using compulation).
This phenomenon is called "aliasing", and the distortion it
causes is called "aliasing distortion" or "fold-back noise".
Aliasing distortion can cause smear or flicker on the
image.
Aperture
The iris opening in a lens that regulates the amount of
light passing into a camera. The size of the aperture
opening determines the amount of light that will get to the
imager (CCD). The larger the opening, the more light that
will enter. Aperture is usually defined in f/stops.
(See
f/Stop,
CCD)
Aspect
Ratio
The ratio of height over width of an image: a standard
video monitor has an aspect ratio of three units of height
(vertical) to four units of width (horizontal). This is
expressed as a 3:4 aspect ratio. Images will become
distorted if forced into a different aspect ratio during
enlargement, reduction, or transfer. The aspect ratio for
HDTV is 16:9.
ATW (Auto
Trace White Balance) (Camera feature)
ATW enables the white balance setting to change
automatically according to lighting conditions. White
balance will change quickly and undetected even when moving
from an interior lit with practicals to an exterior lit with
the noon sun.
Authoring
The editing process used to create DVD software is
called "authoring". Authoring includes the procedures
necessary to encode the movie, graphics, text and sound
data, etc. and to convert the encoded data as well as
various control data into DVD-Video format data. The system
used to perform authoring is called "Authoring System".
Auto Iris
(Camera feature)
A lens iris equipped with a photosensitive detector that can
read changes in lighting conditions and automatically open
or close the iris to compensate for the changes.
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Bandwidth
(ITU-R 601)
The size of the bandwidth controls how much information can
be passed at any given time. "Wide" bandwidths provide a
high quality, clean image. The ITU-R 601
specification provides an analog luminance bandwidth of
5.5 MHz and a chrominance bandwidth of 2.75 MHz.
The ITU-R 601 specification represents the highest
attainable quality for broadcast. The wide bandwidth
required for broadcast video is often compressed for storage
and transmission.
Beam
Current Feedback (Sony) (Monitor feature)
A Beam Current Feedback circuit is built-in to make
corrections for monitor white
balance drift. White balance on monitors without beam
current feedback tends to drift during continuous use over
long periods of time.
Betacam SX
(Sony) (Video Format)
The Betacam SX format is a digital broadcast format with
exceptional quality and flexibility. Features a recording of
8-bit, 4:2:2 component digital signals using an advanced
algorithm. Betacam SX uses Inter-frame, MPEG-2 4:2:2 Profile
@ Main Level (MPEG-2 4:2:2P@ML), and a 9:1 compression
technology on a 1/2" Metal Particle cassette. This
compression scheme uses only I-frames and B-frames. The
4:2:2 color sampling structure helps to maintain the
chrominance information necessary for postproduction,
keying, and multi-layered effects. The format also includes
four 16-bit/48 kHz, uncompressed digital audio channels.
Betacam SX uses a Metal Particle formulation on a 1/2" tape
stock, which is the same 1/2" size cassette as analog
Betacam and Betacam SP giving the Betacam SX "A" designated
VTR's playback capabilities with analog Betacam or Betacam
SP. In fact, BCT and UVW analog tape stock can be used to
record a digital Betacam SX signal. This feature gives
current analog Beta users the ability to use existing analog
stock footage for a digital edit, and helps to maintain the
long-term value of an existing Betacam SP camcorder.
Playback of analog DT (Dynamic Tracking) from -1 to +3 speed
is maintained as well as playback of AFM (Audio FM) audio.
The tape format includes an auxiliary track, video track,
time code track, control track, and 4 audio sectors.
(See
B-frame,
I-frame
MPEG)
B-frame
(Bi-directional-frame)
Predictive frames composed by checking the difference
between the previous and the following frames in a MPEG-2
signal. By itself a B-frame does not make up a complete
picture. An entire sequence of MPEG-2 frames must be decoded
to form a whole picture. A B-frame can also act as a
uni-directional frame, if there is only one I-frame to
reference in an edit. This is known as a BU-frame.
(See
Betacam SX,
I-frame,
MPEG)
BIT (Binary
DigiT)
Each bit represents either "0" or "1" and these can be
combined to represent any number or character. In a digital
system, the number of bits defines the accuracy of sampling;
conventional CDs use 16-bit quantization, and this results
in 16-bit "words".
BIT Rate
The amount of data transmitted in 1 second. The larger
the number, the faster the transfer and the greater the
amount of digital data that can be used for recording and
storage. The DVD system uses the Variable Transfer Rate
system for its MPEG-2 data compression (encoding), while the
Video CD format uses the Fixed Transfer Rate with MPEG-1
compression.
Bitstream
A sequence of digital data.BPI (Bits Per
Inch)
Number of bits that can be recorded per inch of recording
medium.
BPS (Bits
Per Second)
Number of bits that can be transmitted in 1 second
Black
Stretch/Compress Function (Sony) (Camera feature)
With this function you can variably adjust contrast in the
Black area of the image. Black Stretch emphasizes contrast
in the dark area, while Black Compress enhances or deepens
darkness.
Byte
A group of bits � usually consisting of 8 bits � which a
computer treats as a single unit. Normally one character is
represented by one byte.
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C-47
Wooden clothespins. That�s right, every day wooden
clothespins. C-47s are perfect devices for attaching
diffusion material or gels to a lights barndoors (Never Use
Plastic ClothesPins On A Light!). C-47s have a very low burn
threshold and are surprisingly very strong.
CCD (Charged
Coupled Device)
A semiconductor that can produce an electrical output
analogous to the amount of light striking each of its
elements. CCD sensors (imager) are used in both motion video
and still video cameras.
(See
FIT,
HAD,
Hyper HAD,
IT)
CCIR (International
Radio Consultative Committee)
Was a global organization responsible for
establishing television standards. CCIR 601 was the standard
for transmitting Digital Video Component information. The
CCIR has now become the ITU.
(See,
ITU)
Chrominance
The signals that represent the color components of an image.
A black and white (monochrome) image has a chrominance value
of zero.
(See
Component Video,
Color Difference Signal,
Vectorscope,
4:1:1 Sampling)
Chroma Signal
Portion of a video signal that contains color
information.
Clear Scan
(Sony) (Camera feature)
Clear Scan function enables recording of computer monitors
without horizontal bands. This is done by precisely
selecting a shutter speed to match the scanning frequency of
the computer display. Shutter speeds from 60.4 Hz to 200.3
Hz can be selected in 183 increments.
(See
Synchro Scan,
Variable Scan)
Color
Difference Signal
The signal remaining after the Y (luminance) signal is
subtracted from each of the R/G/B signals. The color
difference signal represents the hue (tint) and color
density. Generally represented by PB and PR .
(See
Component Video,
R-Y B-Y,
Y)
Comb Filter
(Monitor feature)
Chrominance and Luminance detail are preserved with the
built-in Comb Filter. Prior to reaching the electron gun,
the composite video signal is broken down into its separate
luminance and chrominance signals as it passes through the
comb filter, which reduces dot crawl and signal error.
Component
Video
Each individual component of the video signal is
transmitted separately. Transmission methods include the
R/G/B method, which transmits the R (red), G (green), and B
(blue) signals separately, and the Y/PB/PR method that
transmits Y (luminance) signal and PB/PR (color difference)
signals separately.
(See
Color Difference Signal,
R-Y B-Y,
Y)
Composite
Video
A single video signal that contains luminance, color and
synchronization information.
(See
Sync)
Compression
Ratio
The ratio of the amount of data in the original
(uncompressed) digital video signal to the amount of data
after compression. The resulting picture quality can vary
considerably, depending on both picture content and
compression method.
CP (Content Package)
(See
SDTI-CP)
Crosstalk
Spillover of audio or video information from one
recorded track to another.
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D9/Digital
S (JVC) (Video Format)
D9 (Digital S) records on 1/2" D9 digital tape stock. The D9
component digital format uses 4:2:2 color sampling, 8 bit
component processing, a data rate of 50 Mbps, and 3.3:1 DCT
(Discrete Cosine Transfer) based compression. All of which
add up to give you a very clean, digital broadcast quality.
D/A
Converter (DAC) (Digital-to-Analog Converter)
Converts (decodes) a digital signal into an equivalent
analog signal.
Decibel
(dB)
A logarithmic unit used to express the ratio between any two
levels; normally used to show the difference between two
sound levels. Because it is expressed on a logarithm scale,
it is convenient for comparing values, which are
considerably different.
DPR (Dual
Pixel Readout) (Sony) (Camera feature)
Combines the luminance output of two adjacent pixels. With
DPR, the light sensitivity is doubled (equivalent to +6 dB
Gain) without an increase in noise. This is unlike
conventional cameras where the use of electronic gain up in
low light amplifies noise as well as the video signal. DPR
can be used in combination with Gain-Up modes of +18 dB, +24
dB for video level equivalents of +24 dB and +42 dB, while
suppressing the noise level. In Hyper Gain, the camera's
gain automatically sets itself to +42 dB, and DPR kicks in,
giving a gain equivalent to +48 dB without the extra noise.
DPR Plus
(Sony) (Camera feature)
DPR Plus (Dual Pixel Readout) will increase sensitivity to
four times of normal by reading an electronic charge of four
adjoining CCD pixels. A high signal-to-noise ratio can be
obtained with only a small loss of quality when Turbo Gain
is used in conjunction with DPR Plus.
DVCAM
(Sony) (Video Format)
The DVCAM format uses 8-bit component digital recording at
25 Mbps, with Intra-frame 5:1 compression and 4:1:1 color
sampling. A 15-micron track pitch provides superior picture
quality, superb multi-generation capability and production
flexibility. Two 1/4" ME cassette sizes are available:
Standard and Mini. The Standard size cassette will hold up
to 184 minutes of information while the Mini cassette will
hold up to 40 minutes of information.
(See
Compression Ratio)
DVCPRO-25
(Panasonic) (SMPTE 321M) (Video Format)
The DVCPRO-25 format specifications were developed in 1994.
The format uses a 1/4" MP tape stock to record a digital
component signal. The data is sampled at a 4:1:1 rate and
uses 8-bit quantization at 25 Mbps. With an 18-micron track
pitch and an analog control track, DVCPRO-25 is a very
accurate format for editing.
(See
Compression Ratio)
DVCPRO-50
(Panasonic) (Video Format)
The DVCPRO-50 format uses a 1/4" MP tape stock to record a
broadcast digital component signal. The data is sampled at a
4:2:2 rate and uses 8-bit quantization at 50 Mbps. 4:2:2
color sampling is useful for clean chroma keys, and
multi-layered effects. With an 18-micron track pitch and an
analog control track, DVCPRO-50 is a very accurate format
for editing.
(See
Compression Ratio)
DynaLatitude (Sony) (Camera feature)
Based on the TruEye system, DynaLatitude adaptively manages
the contrast of each pixel according to analysis of the
video signal level distribution. This brings a new dimension
to technologies like Dynamic Contrast Control (DCC) which
controls the dynamic range of video signals. DynaLatitude
optimizes video level distribution based on signal
histograms to make the most of the limited dynamic range of
the video signal. Even in difficult lighting situations
picture quality will be greatly improved. DynaLatitude is
adjustable in four steps via a GUI (Graphic User Interface)
and menu system: LOW, MID, HIGH, and OFF.
(See
TruEye)
Dynamic
Range
The difference between the maximum signal level and the
noise floor in electronic equipment, represented in dB.
(See
Decibel)
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EZ Focus
Function (Sony) (Camera feature)
Let�s you focus precisely without stopping down the lens. EZ
Focus automatically opens the iris, reducing the
depth-of-field, making critical focusing easier. At the same
time, the shutter is automatically set to obtain the correct
light level. EZ Focus is overridden while recording.
EZ Mode
(Sony) (Camera feature)
By pressing the EZ Mode button, the camera is instantly set
to a standard or auto position. The camcorder has a choice
of two EZ Modes - Standard or Custom. When set to Custom,
the camera setting is changed in accordance with the
selected menu setting. There is a Switch Guard to prevent
misoperation of EZ Mode, Auto Iris and ATW buttons. The
guard has tiny holes so you can see the LED indicators for
the buttons while shooting.
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Field
In NTSC, each frame of video is made up of 525 lines.
Two 262.5 horizontal line fields equal one frame. Each field
represents either the even or the odd lines of a complete
frame. A scanning system that uses even/odd field pairs is
defined as an interlaced scanning system. A field equals
one-half of a complete television scanning cycle (1/60 of a
second NTSC; 1/50 of a second Pal/SECAM). When interlaced,
two fields combine to make one video frame with a scanning
cycle of 1/30 of a second at a rate of 1/30 of a second in
NTSC.
(See
Frame,
Interlaced,
NTSC,
PAL,
SECAM)
Firewire(Apple Computer) (IEEE-1394)
A communications protocol developed by Apple Computer, which
provides for the fast transmission of data, video, audio,
and power over a single cable. Data is transmitted at 400
Mbps (400 million bits per second).
(See
i.Link)
FIT (Frame
Interline Transfer)
A type of CCD technology, which dramatically reduces
vertical smear as compared to IT, type CCDs.
(See
CCD,
IT)
Frame
A complete TV picture consisting of two interlaced
fields. The NTSC system scans 525 lines with an electron
beam and occurs at a frequency of once every 1/30 of a
second.
(See
Field,
Interlaced)
f/Stop
A calibrated measure of aperture lens opening. f/Stop is a
numerical relationship between the diameter of the lens
opening and the focal length of the lens. Common f/Stops
include f/1.4, f/2, f/2.8, f/4, f/5.6, f/8, f/11, f/16,
f/22. The higher the number, the smaller the lens opening
and the less light falling on the imager (CCD). In low-light
situations, a large aperture (e.g. f/1.4) would be needed.
(See
Aperture)
Full Auto
Shooting (JVC) (Camera feature)
Full Auto Shooting (FAS) mode for point-and-shoot ease of
operation. You simply zoom and focus. Activating the Full
Auto Shooting sets the camera to the Auto Iris Mode,
even if the lens is set to manual. Automatic video level
control (ALC) is also activated, along with Extended
Electronic Iris (EEI) and Full Auto White, which
provide both variable gain and variable shutter. Shoot
continuously from a dark area to a bright area without
changing Gain, Iris or ND filter.
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Genlock
Circuitry that synchronizes the television signal source of
two or more devices at the vertical, horizontal, and chroma
phase levels such that the signals may be cut, mixed, or
cross-faded without noticeable roll, jump, or chroma shift.
All video signals contain synchronization pulses that are
used to reconstruct the picture on a CRT (monitor). When
several signals are used together through a common device
such as a production switcher, they all must be operating on
the same sync. A Master Sync generator provides genlock to
signal generating devices (cameras, VTRs, switchers) so that
they can operate in sync.
(See
Sync)
Good Shot
Marker (Sony) (Camera feature)
Data such as Date, Time, Camera ID, Cassette Number and
Shot Number can all be recorded during the acquisition
process. Shot Data can be used to quickly retrieve material
during editing. A "Record Start Mark" is automatically
placed on the tape each time the VTR Start button is pressed
while the VTR is in standby mode. A Good-Shot Marker can be
added at any time by pressing the return button on the side
of the lens while in the record mode. These marks will
appear highlighted as picture stamps (thumbnails) on the GUI
of the Sony Non-linear Editors. Using picture stamps helps
to eliminate tedious searching through recorded material,
and saves hard disk space by downloading only the scenes
selected by editors.
GOP (Group
of Pictures)
P and/or B-frames between successive I-frames in an MPEG
signal. A GOP is usually about 15 frames long in an NTSC
system. The length of a GOP can vary depending on editing
needs. The length of a GOP represents the editing capability
of an MPEG signal. If an edit accurs within a GOP, an MPEG
decoder/recoder will be needed to reclose the GOP. A GOP
must begin with an I-frame and end with an I-frame,
therefore if a cut accurs in the middle of a GOP, the signal
needs to be reconstructed with a decoder/recoder.
(See
B-frame,
I-frame,
MPEG
P-frame)
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HAD (Hole
Accumulated Diode)
A CCD sensor developed by Sony with improved performance
in spectral response, vertical smear, and sensitivity. The
introduction of the HAD sensor also allowed for electronic
shuttering capabilities to IT type sensors.
(See
CCD,
HyperHAD,
IT)
Horizontal
Blanking (Retrace)
The process of bringing the electron beam in a CRT back to
the left side of the screen after a left to right line has
been traced on the screen. The beam is shut off (blanked),
during the period of retrace. About 83% of the total
horizontal line time is spent writing the line. The
remaining 17% is spent bringing the beam back to the left
side; retrace, before starting the next line.
(See
Field,
Frame,
Interlaced,
Waveform Monitor)
Horizontal
Resolution
The ability of a system to reproduce closely spaced
alternating black and white vertical lines of detail across
the screen. The number of alternating black and white lines
is divided by the aspect ratio to make comparisons between
horizontal and vertical resolution easier. This number is
usually expressed as TV lines per picture height.
(See
Aspect Ratio)
HyperHAD
A derivative of the HAD sensor that incorporates On Chip
Lensing (OCL) technology, and the use of microscopic lenses
mounted over each sensing pixel. Hyper HAD sensors with OCL
have no perceptible smear and nearly doubled sensitivity.
(See
CCD,
HAD,
IT)
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IF Lens
(Internal
Focus) (Lens feature)
A lens which, when focused allows the internal lens elements
to turn while the external barrel of the lens as well as the
front lens element remain stationary. This feature greatly
reduces lens flare and lens aberrations. An IF lens is
required for certain screw-on filters and matte boxes, to
prevent them from turning during a focus pull.
I-frame
(Intra-frame)
A frame included in a GOP, which contains information to
construct a whole picture. The I-frame usually surrounds a
B-frame and a P-frame.
(See
B-frame,
GOP,
P-frame,
BetacamSX)
i.Link
(Sony) (IEEE-1394)
Sony designation for the Apple Computer developed, IEEE-1394
digital transfer signal.
(See
Firewire)
Instant-On
(Panasonic) (Monitor feature)
The Intant-On feature allows users to shut down the power to
the monitor from the AC source without damaging the power
supply. When power is restored to the AC source, the monitor
will turn back on.
Inter-Frame
Compression
The compression that results from reducing the space and
time redundancy across a series of related frames of video.
Interlaced
A method of scanning in which one-half the total lines
(262.5 NTSC) are scanned in one field (even-numbered lines),
and the other half of the total number of lines are scanned
in the next field (odd-numbered lines). Thus, adjacent lines
of a complete picture (one frame) belong to successive
fields.
(See
Field,
Frame,
Horizontal Blanking)
Intra-Frame
Compression
The compression of a single frame of video by reducing the
spatial redundancy within the frame. DV, DVCAM, DVCPRO use
Intra-frame compression.
Interpolation
A calculation method used to produce intermediate values
between two points. In quantization or re-quantization, an
interpolation technique is used for more precise D/A
conversion and, consequently, more accurate analog signal
reproduction.
(See
D/A Converter,
Quantization)
IRE
(Institute of Radio Engineers)
A unit of measure derived to help make the description and
reading of video levels easier to explain. A scale on a
waveform monitor divides 1-Volt Peak to Peak video into 140
IRE units. The amplitude of the video signal from blanking
(zero volts) to peak white is 0.714286 volts or 100 IRE
units. Synchronization signals extend from blanking to
0.285714 volts or -40 IRE units.
Other important IRE levels to be aware of include:
· Picture Black: 7.5 IRE (above zero volts)
· Picture White: 100 IRE (above zero volts)
· Blanking: 0.0 IRE (zero volts)
· Burst Pedestal: 0.0 IRE (zero volts)
· Synchronization: -40.0 IRE (below zero volts)
(See
Horizontal Blanking,
Sync,
Waveform Monitor)
ISR (Interactive
Status Reporting) (Sony) (VTR feature)
System designed to provide error/warning reports for a VTR,
which enables engineers to take the appropriate action in a
timely manner.
IT (Interline
Transfer)
A CCD, which uses light-shielding structures, called
vertical registers, which are mounted next to each
individual pixel sensor to transfer the electrical charge.
IT CCDs are simpler to manufacture and are, therefore, less
costly than FT or FIT CCDs. IT sensors are used on
lower-cost broadcast cameras and most industrial and
consumer cameras.(See
CCD,
FIT,
HAD,
HyperHAD)
ITU (International
Telecommunications Union)
The ITU, headquartered in Geneva, Switzerland is an
international organization within which governments and the
private sector coordinate global telecom networks and
services.
(See,
CCIR)
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Linear PCM
(Pulse Code Modulation)
An analog audio signal is converted into a digital signal in
PCM form, but compression is not performed. Thus, higher
signal quality is obtained than when compression is used.
LoLux (JVC) (Camera feature)
When activated, the LoLux mode increases sensitivity with
almost no increase in noise. LoLux lets you capture
high-quality video footage with excellent color balance at
just 0.75 lux minimum illumination.
Lux
A unit of measure of incident light (not reflected from
the scene). The lux rating of a camera is usually, loosely
used to determine if the camera is capable of producing an
image in low light situations. The lower the lux
specifications, the lower the required light level needed to
produce an image. Generally, the lux rating of a camera is
listed in the specifications as "Minimum Illumination". The
Minimum Illumination specification lists the lux rating as
well as the f/Stop and gain settings needed to achieve the
lowest lux possible on that particular camera.
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Memory
Stick (Sony)
Still images can be captured in JPEG with a Memory Stick. A
Memory Stick is a small card, about the size of a stick of
gum, which slides into the camcorder and stores still images
at 640 x 480 resolution. Up to 988 JPEG still
images can be stored on a single 64 MB Memory Stick. The
information stored on the Memory Stick can then be
downloaded into a PC via the MSAC-PC2 PCMCIA card
adapter. An entire storyboard can then be e-mailed to your
client after the days� shooting is complete, for immediate
approval.
MPEG (Motion
Picture Experts Group)
It is the nickname given to a family of International
Standards used for coding audio-visual information in a
digital compressed format. MPEG standards include MPEG-1,
MPEG-2 and MPEG-4. MPEG-1, is the standard on which such
products as Video CD and MP3 are based. MPEG-2, the standard
on which such products as Digital Television set top boxes
and DVD are based and MPEG-4, the standard for multimedia on
the web. The current thrust is MPEG-7, "Multimedia Content
Description Interface".
(See
Betacam SX)
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NTSC
(National Television System Committee)
Color system mainly used in North America and East Asia
(Japan and Taiwan). NTSC uses 525 scan lines with a
30-frame/60-field per second rate.
(See:
PAL,
SECAM)
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PAL
(Phase Alternation by Line)
Color system mainly used in Europe (except France), South
America, Africa, Oceania and China. PAL uses 625 scan lines
with a 25-frame/50-field per second rate.
(See
Field,
NTSC,
SECAM)
PanaBlack
(Panasonic) (Monitor feature)
A PanaBlack picture tube improves contrast, color
reproduction and clarity of detail. A dark black screen
glass provides up to a 40% increase in contrast, compared to
conventional CRT's, by decreasing the amount of ambient
light that passes through the screen and reflects back off
of the phosphors.
P-frame
(Predicted-frame)
Contains only predictive information. The predictive
information is determined by looking at the difference
between the present frame and the previous frame. P-frames
do not make up a whole picture by themselves. P-frames are
not used in the Betacam SX MPEG2 4:2:2P@ML compression
scheme.
(See
B-frame,
I-frame,
GOP.
Betacam)
Pixel
An individual picture element. In a pure analog system,
the pixel is sized according to the picture resolution of
the system. In the digital video system, the size of the
pixel is determined by the digital-sampling rate.
Pre-Roll
Also known as "Speed", during the linear editing
process, the source and record VTRs rewind the videotape a
pre-determined number of seconds before the set edit
in-point (usually 5 seconds). Some noise may occur when a
videotape is played from "Stop" or "Pause". In order to
ensure a clean edit, the videotape must travel over the VTR
heads at the correct speed. By starting the source and
record tapes 5 seconds before the edit point, a clean cut
can be ensured.
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Quantization
Process that involves sampling the
waveform of an analog signal, to convert the analog waveform
in to digital data that represents the original signal.
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RGB (Red,
Green, & Blue)
The basic components of the color television system. They
are also the primary colors of light, not to be confused
with Cyan, Magenta, and Yellow, the primary pigments.
(R-Y),
(B-Y)
Color difference signals of component video.
(SeeColor
Difference Signal,
Component Video,
Y)
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SECAM
(Sequential Couleur A
Memoire)
Color system used in France and some African countries,
Eastern Europe and Russia.
(See
Field,
NTSC,
PAL)
Setup Card
(Sony) (Camera feature)
The setup parameters of a camera can be quickly set and
saved with an IC card. Several different custom settings can
be stored ahead of time and instantly recreated in the
field. Multiple cameras can be matched easily and quickly
with a single setup card.
SDI (Serial
Digital Interface) (SMPTE 259M)
Standard based on an uncompressed 270Mbps-transfer rate.
This is a 10-bit, scrambled, polarity independent interface,
with a common scrambling for both component (ITU-R 601) and
composite digital video and four channels of embedded
digital audio. Uses a 75-ohm BNC connector and coax cable.
Can transmit over 600 feet (200 meters).
(See
Bandwidth)
SDTI (Serial
Data Transport Interface/ QSDI) (SMPTE
305M)
Also known as Sony's QSDI. Allows faster than real-time
transfers between various servers and non-linear editing
systems with both 270 Mb and 360-Mb support. With typical
real-time compressed video transfer rates in the 18 Mbps to
25 Mbps to 50 Mbps range, SDTI's 200+ Mbps speed can
accommodate transfers up to four times normal speed. During
the high speed transfer a header immediately before the
content package providing a series of flags and data ID's to
indicate what's coming as well as line counts to check data
continuity.
(See
BetacamSX ,
DVCAM)
SDTI-CP
(Serial Data Transport Interface
- Content Package) (SMPTE 326)
A SMPTE standard, SDTI-CP transports MPEG data streams
without codecs, distortion or loss. Direct connectivity
between an SDTI-CP VTR and servers or non-linear systems is
possible. Data includes only the content. No header or
footer is included in the transfer. Interface is not
defined, content only is sent. Information found in the
content package includes color system, audio, aux. data,
metadata (user info.) and picture information. Used for
Studio/Distribution. (See BetacamSX , SDTI)
(See
BetacamSX,
SDTI)
Signal to
Noise Ratio (S/N)
The relationship of the level of the signal that the unit is
actually processing compared to the amount of electric
signal (noise) inherently produced by a unit in operation.
The higher the S/N ratio, the better the audio and /or video
quality.
Skin Detail
Function (Sony) (Camera feature)
Gives your subjects a smooth complexion with a soft image in
the facial area, while maintaining sharpness in other areas.
Controls on the camera let you to designate the active skin
area and choose the color range and level. The designated
active area of Skin Detail is set by simply adjusting the
Area Detection cursor on the viewfinder screen. The color
range and skin detail level can also be set by viewfinder
menu system. Capable of color and detail corrections within
the full range of the visible spectrum (360! range).
Smear
An undesirable artifact of CCD chips that appears as a
vertical stripe and is a distortion of high brightness
values. All CCDs can produce smear, but the mechanism of its
generation and the severity of image impairment that results
varies with the type of CCD imager. Some modern CCDs have
reduced smear to the point that it can only be measured by
sensitive instruments and is no longer visible to the human
eye.
(See
FIT,
HAD,
HyperHAD)
Sync (Synchronization
Signals)
The rate at which the picture is traced on the display
device must be synchronized to the source video. There are
three types of sync signals in composite video; color burst,
horizontal and vertical sync.
(See
Genlock)
Synchro
Scan (Panasonic) (Camera feature)
Synchro Scan function allows flicker-free shooting of
computer monitors. Computer monitors have different scan
rates, which would normally appear as flicker. Synchro Scan
enables electronic shutter speeds to be variably set to
match the computer monitors frequency in increments from
1/61.9 to 1/253.7 of a second.
(See
Clear Scan,
Variable Scan)
Super Scene
Finder (JVC) (Camera feature)
A JVC exclusive, Super Scene Finder lets you log scenes (in
and out time code) automatically or manually in the field,
and mark which scenes are good. This dramatically speeds up
the transfer process and saves disk space, because you only
digitize those scenes you want for editing. The scene data
is written directly onto the MiniDV videocassette,
eliminating the need for cassettes with a memory chip. Up to
134 scenes can be marked per cassette. In addition, scene
data from the last 3 cassettes is held in the camcorder's
memory, allowing the data to be added to the cassette at a
later time.
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Tape Title
(Sony) (Camera feature)
Feature allows the operator to add a visual slate to the
tape during the first five seconds of recording. This
feature is very useful when logging footage from multiple
tapes and cameras.
Temporal
Redundancy
Information existing in the I-frame that does not change
over a period of about 15 successive frames. This
information is found to be predictable. (E.g. blue sky)
(See
Inter/Intra-Frame Compression,
I-frame,
P-frame)
Time Code
An electronic address code used to identify each video
frame by Hour, Minute, Second, Frame. In the NTSC system,
SMPTE (Society of Motion Picture and Television Engineers)
time code is generally used, while EBU (European
Broadcasting Union) time code is generally used for the PAL
system.
Time/Date
Stamp (Camera feature)
A representation of the date and time can be inserted into
the lower third of the image, in order to permanently
document the exact time and date that the shot was acquired.
This feature is a requirement when shooting legal
depositions.
TLCS (Total
Level Control System) (Sony) (Camera
feature)
Even if incoming light is above or below the range of the
automatic Iris Control, the camcorder will still be able to
achieve correct picture exposure by using the Iris Control
in combination with Auto Gain Control (AGC) and CCD Auto
Exposure. This ensures ease of operation, while also
maintaining low-noise characteristics.
TruEye
(Sony) (Camera feature)
During the process of DSP (Digital Signal Processing) some
loss in hue (chrominance) can occur. This phenomenon is seen
in extreme highlight conditions. TruEye helps to correct
this loss by automatically adjusting the brightness, hue,
and saturation, so that the recorded image approaches the
faithfulness of the human eye.
(See
DynaLatitude)
Turbo Gain
(Sony) (Camera feature)
Turbo Gain allows a camera to see in the dark. By the push
of a button the gain level will instantly rise to +42 dB.
Turbo Gain level is selectable between +36 dB and +42 dB.
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Variable Scan
(JVC) (Camera feature)
Variable Scan function allows flicker-free shooting of
computer monitors. Shutter speeds can be set from 1/60.5 to
1/196.7 of a second in 255 increments to precisely match the
scan rate of the monitor.
(See
Clear Scan,
Synchro Scan)
Vectorscope
A specialized oscilloscope used to display the color
information in a video signal. In particular, a vectorscope
decodes the color information into R - Y & B � Y. Those
signals are used to drive the x and y axis of the scope.
Total lack of color in a video signal is displayed as a dot
in the center of the vectorscope display. The angle,
distance around the circle, and magnitude, distance away
from the center, indicates the phase and amplitude of the
color signal.
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Waveform Monitor
A specialized oscilloscope that is used
to display and evaluate video signals. A time base
synchronized to the video signal drives the horizontal axis
of a waveform monitor. The amplitude of the video signal
drives the vertical axis of the display.
(See
Horizontal Blanking,
IRE,
SYNC)
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Y
Pure analog luminance information.
(See
Component Video,
Color Difference Signal)
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Zoom Ratio
The ratio of the focal length at the
telephoto end of a lens to that at the wide end. A zoom lens
can change the size of an object appearing on the monitor to
the extent specified by the zoom ratio. The zoom ratio of a
lens can be determined by dividing the longest focal length
by the shortest (ie. 82mm /6.8mm = 12X zoom)
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