Title: An Attentional Theory of Continuity Editing
1An Attentional Theory of Continuity Editing
- Tim J. Smith
- 21/07/06
- tim.smith_at_ed.ac.uk
- http//homepages.inf.ed.ac.uk/s9732397/
2- B.L.U.F. (Bottom Line Up Front)
- Continuity existence constancy
- Continuity editing rules requirements for
existence constancy
3- What is continuity?
- Continuity Making a smooth cut means joining
two shots in such a way that the transition does
not create a noticeable jerk and the spectators
illusion of seeing continuous motion is not
interrupted. (Reisz Millar, 1953)
- Existence Constancy is the experience that
objects persist through space and time despite
the fact that their presence in the visual field
may be discontinuous (Butterworth, 1991).
4- Continuity existence constancy?
- Show that
- the requirements are the same
- by adhering to those requirements a cut can be
created that has existence constancy. - ? Create a cut that has existence constancy.
5Existence Constancy does not require full
continuity We sometimes perceive objects within
the world as being continuous even though they
change ? Change Blindness
- Change Blindness
- Selective and sparse representations
- We rely on the world to tell us when something
has changed (Visual transients). - We have to expect a change to detect without
transients. - Otherwise we assume existence constancy.
Simons Levin, 1998
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7- Change Captures Attention
- Visual transients involuntarily capture a
viewers attention. - flicker, motion, dis/appearances, colour/
brightness changes. - To hide a change
- mask the transients, or
- shift attention elsewhere
- ? misdirection.
- Cause overt Attentional shifts (Saccades)
- ? 200ms perceptual hole
- What changes can we use to hide a cut?
2
8- Using natural attentional cues
- Most dominant cue is motion.
- Wait until the woman makes some kind of
movement and then cut during the motion.
9- Match Action Editing
- ? We have just devised the match action editing
rule. -
the cutter should look for some movement by the
actor who holds the viewers attention, and he
should use that movement to trigger his cut from
one scene to another. A broad action, will offer
the easier cut, but even a slight movement of
some part of the players body can serve to
initiate a cut which will be smooth, or
invisible. The important consideration here is
that there be just enough movement to catch the
viewers attention. (Dmytryk, 1986, page
435-436)
10- Maintaining Existence Constancy
- If the viewer notices the result of the cut they
may cease to perceive existence constancy. - ? Need to satisfy perceptual expectations.
- Perceptual Expectations
- Spatiotemporal
- When and Where an object is expected.
- Stored as an attentional index.
- Object
- Appearance and Semantic details.
- Stored in an object file.
Existence constancy only requires maintenance of
the attentional index not the object file.
Flombaum Scholl, in press
11- Matching Spatial expectations
- We create existence constancy across the cut by
ensuring that the objects are roughly in the same
screen location after the cut as before.
12- 180 System
- ? We have just devised the 180 System.
- Rotating the camera around a 180 arc ensures
- directional continuity, and
- actors remain in roughly the same position on the
screen. - Deviating from this system creates discontinuity
- the actors are not perceived as having
existence constancy.
13- But does this result in existence constancy?
1) Viewers are more aware of discontinuity
cuts 2) Viewers can perform change detection
across match cuts. 3) Only films edited for
continuity are recalled accurately.
Levin Simons, 1997 Williams and Simons, 2000
Existence constancy is perceived across match
cuts
Frith Robson, 1975 Smith Greve, in prep.
d'Ydewalle Vanderbeeken, 1990 Schröder,
1990 Smith, in prep
14- Conclusions
- Continuity existence constancy
- Continuity editing (CE) rules requirements for
existence constancy - By identifying the cognitive foundations of CE
- More precise CE rules can be formalised and
modelled. - Filmmakers gain a greater understanding of their
viewers cinematic experience. - Psychologists learn more about real-world
cognition. - Film theorists are given a whole new way of
looking at film.
15Thank you tim.smith_at_ed.ac.uk http//homepages.i
nf.ed.ac.uk/s9732397
- References provided on request.
- Any questions?
16Levels of Continuity?
- Emotion
- Story
- Rhythm
- Eye trace
- 2D composition
- 3D space of action
Co-dependent
Increasing Importance
All essential for the creation of existence
constancy
(Walter Murch, 2001)
But this list needs empirical validation
17- Bibliography
- Anderson, J. (1996). The Reality of Illusion An
Ecological Approach to Cognitive Film Theory.
Southern. Illinois University Press. - Block, B. (2001). The Visual Story Seeing
structure of film, TV, and New Media. MA, USA
Focal Press. - Butterworth, G. (1991). Phenomenal Permanence. G.
Thines, A. Costall, G. Butterworth (Eds.),
Michotte's experimental phenomenology of
perception (pp. 117-122). Hillsdale, NJ Lawrence
Erlbaum. -
- Cutting, J. (2004). Perceiving Scene in Film and
in the World. J. D. Anderson, B. F. Anderson
(Eds.), Moving image theory ecological
considerations . - Dmytryk, E. (1986). On Filmmaking. London, UK
Focal Press. -
- d'Ydewalle, G., Vanderbeeken, M. (1990).
Perceptual and cognitive processing of editing
rules in film. R. Groner, G. d'Ydewalle, R.
Parnham (Eds.), From eye to mind Information
acquisition in perception, search, and reading.
(pp. 129-139). Amsterdam Elsevier (North
Holland). -
- Flombaum, J. I., Scholl, B. J. (in press). A
temporal same-object advantage in the tunnel
effect Facilitated change detection for
persisting objects. Journal of Experimental
Psychology Human Perception Performance. -
-
18- Reisz, K., Millar, G. (1953). Technique of Film
Editing. London, UK Focal Press. -
- Simons, D. J., Levin, D. T. (1998). Failure to
detect changes to people during real-world
interaction. Psychonomic Bulletin and Review, 5,
644-649. - Schröder, J. (1990). Die psychologische Realität
von Prinzipien des Continuity Cinema. G. Schumm,
H. G. Wulff (Eds.), Film und Psychologie I.
Kognition-Rezeption-Perzeption (pp. 109-142).
Münster Maks Publikationen. - Smith, T. J., Greve, A. (in preparation).
Editing Memory Investigating the effect of
continuity on memory. - Smith, T. J. (in preparation) Classifying
Continuity The relationship between eye
movements and continuity in moving-picture
editing. - Tan, E. S.-H. (1995). Constraint and Convention
in Psychological Film Aesthetics On the
Psychological Basis of Cinematic Conventions. J.
Müller (Ed.), Towards a pragmatics of the
audiovisual. (pp. 67-86). Münster Nodus. - Williams, P., Simons, D. J. (2000). Detecting
Changes in Novel, Complex, Three-dimensional
Objects. Visual Cognition, 7(1/2/3), 297-322. - Frith, U., Robson, J. E. (1975). Perceiving
the language of films. Perception, 4(1), 97-103. -
- Levin, D. T. , Simons, D. J. (1997). Failure to
detect changes to attended objects in motion
pictures. Psychonomic Bulletin and Review, 4,
501-506.
19- 3 Types of attentional cue
- PULL
- POINT
- PUSH
?
?
20 Eyeline Match
- The viewer, as a rule, will not accept the
fact of a look until he sees the actors eyes
focus, or freeze on something off-screen. At
that point he, too, will look off, following the
actors gaze. By the time his own eyes have
refocused, the actors point-of-view (POV) shot
should occupy the screen. To make the cut, then,
we fix the frame in which the actors eyes have
frozen, add three or four frames more to give
the viewer time to react and move his eyes as he
follows the actors look, at which point the cut
is made. (Dmytryk, 1986, page 444)
21Full continuity
22Crossing the line (similar to Frith Robson,
1975)
23Identity discontinuity (similar to Levin
Simons, 1997)
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261 2 3 4 5 6 7 8
27Hasson, U., et al. (2004). Intersubject
Synchronization of Cortical Activity During
Natural Vision. Science, 303, 1634-1640.
This intersubject correlation was attributable
to (FFA) A component driven by faces, (CoS)
indoor and outdoor scenes, and (a nonspecific
component) driven by what?
?Reflects observers segmenting the event into
meaningful units.
28- The psychological effects of cuts
29- Object Files (Kahneman Treisman, 1984 1992)
- Mid-level representation of object-level
information. - Focal attention binds features together.
- Sticks to moving object via spatiotemporal
index. - Correspondence compares current visual
information to object file (Ullman, 1979). - Correspondence only occurs if
- viewer older than 10 months (Xu, 1999) and
- adopt a change detection viewing strategy (Levin
Simons, 1997) or - visual transients capture attention (Rensink et
al., 1997).
Perception appears to define objects more by
spatiotemporal constraints than by their sensory
properties or by their labelled identity
(Kahneman, Treisman, and Gibbs, 1992, pg 177)
30- Visual Index or FINST (Pylyshyn, 1989)
- FINST Fingers of Instantiation.
- Pre-attentive object identifier.
- Overt attentional shifts are quicker to indexed
objects. - Visual Indices can be maintained during occlusion
if - Objects disappear from view via gradual occlusion
(Michotte, 1955 Scholl Pylyshyn, 1999) - Continuous tracking of object by covert
attention. - Satisfy spatiotemporal expectations (Hirsch,
1982 Flombaum Scholl, in press). - Maintained object file.
- ? Existence constancy
31(Xu, 1999)
32- Matched-Exit/Entrance cuts rare (a subset of 14)
- But cuts during conversations most frequent (31)
- (May, Dean, Barnard, 2003)
- Triangle system
1
2
3
Viewers eyetrace is the same irrespective of
camera angle (Block, 2001).
"The Five C's of Cinematography (Mascelli, 1998)
X
- Social attention cues
- Conversational turn taking, addressing the
partner, pointing, - head turns towards partner or object, audio
bleed, etc. - Viewers might be anticipating cut (May, Dean,
Barnard, 2003).
33- Inter-subject agreement of gaze location
increases as shot size decreases. - Reorienting of gaze after cut is quicker and more
consistent in closer shots. - Medium Close-Ups (MCU) of face increase
effectiveness of interpersonal cues. - Audio bleed saccades by 3rd frame/120ms after
cut. - Purely visual cues saccades by 4th frame/160ms
after cut.
MFS
MCU
CU
34Silent
Sig. peak
Audio
35- Reference List
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Perceptual and cognitive processing of editing
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acquisition in perception, search, and reading.
(pp. 129-139). Amsterdam Elsevier (North
Holland). - 2. Schröder, J. (1990). Die psychologische
Realität von Prinzipien des Continuity Cinema. G.
Schumm, H. G. Wulff (Eds.), Film und
Psychologie I. Kognition-Rezeption-Perzeption
(pp. 109-142). Münster Maks Publikationen. - 3. Frith, U., Robson, J. E. (1975).
Perceiving the language of films. Perception,
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