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EDITING ATTENTION: the perceptual foundations of continuity editing

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Supervisors: John Lee, Helen Pain, Graeme Ritchie. CCSMI Conference, July 23rd, 2004 ... of disappearing and hidden objects in temporal cortex of the macaque. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: EDITING ATTENTION: the perceptual foundations of continuity editing


1
EDITING ATTENTION the perceptual foundations of
continuity editing
  • Tim J. Smith
  • tim.smith_at_ed.ac.uk
  • http//homepages.inf.ed.ac.uk/s9732397
  • School of Informatics, University of Edinburgh
  • Supervisors John Lee, Helen Pain, Graeme Ritchie
  • CCSMI Conference, July 23rd, 2004

2
Continuity Editing
  • What?
  • A system of heuristics, guidelines, and patterns
    specifying how different camera shots can be
    edited together.
  • Why?
  • To make the visual transition between shots
    invisible to the viewer.
  • Avoid a jarring transition Defensive Response
  • To ensure viewer comprehension of space, action,
    and narrative across an edit.
  • Example
  • the 180 Rule. v
    X

3
Continuity Editing
  • Why does it work?
  • Analogue for real-world shifts of point-of-view
    (Griffith Lindgren).
  • Eye blink as a mental cut (Huston Murch).
  • Analogue of mental experience (Munsterberg
    Reisz Messaris).
  • Inertia of narrative comprehension (Fairservice).
  • Compatibility with rules of ecological
    perception (Gibson Anderson).
  • Continuity of eye location and movement across
    the screen (Block).
  • Goal of this study

HIGH
Level of perceptual processing
LOW
To empirically investigate viewers awareness of
an edit at the level of graphical perception.
4
A simple edit Lateral Stitch
5
Cutting for Continuity
  • What is the best way to edit the Lateral Stitch?
  • The cut should be made whilst the subject is
    still partially within the frame (Katz, 1991).
  • 50 Exit
  • The subject should be partially within the frame
    immediately after the cut (Katz, 1991).
  • 50 Entry
  • Why?
  • The effect is to make the cut smoother and to
    speed up the flow of action (Katz, 1991).

6
Questions
  • Do viewers construct visual expectations based on
    the principal objects motion relative to the
    screen edge?
  • Are the suggestions of continuity editing
    compatible with these expectations?
  • Do these expectations result in periods of low
    attention during which the visual discontinuity
    of the edit could be perceptually hidden?

7
Visual Occlusion
  • Real-world objects do not suddenly cease to
    exist, change identity, or relocate without
    associated transitions (Michotte, 1950).
  • Effects of occlusion
  • Continued object perception during occlusion
    (Baker et al., 2001).
  • Maintain spatiotemporal expectations.
  • Easier initiation of occular smooth pursuit.
  • We utilise the same perceptual assumptions when
    viewing film as in real-world perception
    (Anderson, 1996).
  • Hypothesis
  • The viewer expects the principal object to be
    fully occluded on exit (100) and on entry (0)
    to create the maximum impression of continuity.

8
Attention and the Saccade
  • Goal is to relocate fovea, most sensitive part of
    the retina
  • Visual attention is attenuated during saccadic
    eye movements due to saccadic suppression
  • Duration 200ms
  • 50-100ms preparation and recovery
  • 30ms actual movement
  • Therefore
  • A visual discontinuity can be hidden in a saccade
    if the change occurs during the period of
    saccadic suppression.
  • Hypothesis
  • Predictable edits (100 Exit 0 Entry) will
    show a fading out of attention before the edit
    and a brief fading in after the edit.

9
Experiment
  • 9 different animations.
  • Identical except for Entry and Exit conditions.
  • Exit 0, 50, 100, Random
  • Entry 0, 50, 100, Random
  • Attention tested at 13 points across the screen.
  • Accuracy measured
  • Reaction times and smoothness ratings also
    recorded (not reported here).
  • 28 subjects

10
Results
  • 100 Exit shows evidence of predictive saccades.
  • 0 Entry shows slowest recovery of attention
  • 100 Entry creates maximum attention, but
  • 50 Entry shows predictive saccading.

Ideal distribution of attention across a
predictive saccade
Percentage of Correct Response ()
Cue position relative to edit (frames)
11
Results An Ideal Edit?
  • 100 Exit
  • 50 Entry
  • optimum perception?
  • 100 Exit
  • 100 Entry
  • optimum attention

Continuity Rules specified the ideal edit as
50 Exit 50 Entry Our results support this
whilst improving upon it. But, without a method
of testing continuity perception we cannot show
the benefit of occlusion on entry (50 Entry).
12
Conclusion
  • In the Lateral Stitch viewers expect the
    principal object to be fully occluded by the
    screen edge before an edit occurs.
  • This expectation manifests itself as saccade
    preparation prior to the edit.
  • Initiating a saccade prior to the edit masks the
    visual discontinuity with saccadic suppression.
    This removes the viewers ability to directly
    perceive the edit and be affected by it (e.g.
    defensive response).
  • Our evidence agrees with the continuity editing
    rules whilst improving their precision and
    validating them with empirical evidence.
  • Future research will continue to unlock the
    connections between continuity editing,
    attention, and perception.
  • Do viewers construct visual expectations based on
    the principal objects motion relative to the
    screen edge?
  • Do these expectations result in periods of low
    attention during which the visual discontinuity
    of the edit could be perceptually hidden?
  • Are the suggestions of continuity editing
    compatible with these expectations?

13
References
  • Anderson, J.D. (1996) The reality of illusion An
    ecological approach to cognitive film theory
  • Baker et al. (2001), Neuronal Representation of
    disappearing and hidden objects in temporal
    cortex of the macaque. Exp. Brain Research
    140375-381
  • Katz, S. D. (1991) Film Directing Shot by Shot.
  • McConkie, G. W., Currie, C. B. (1996). Visual
    stability across saccades while viewing complex
    pictures. Journal of Experimental Psychology
    Human Perception Performance, 22(3), 563-581.
  • Michotte, A. (1950) On phenomenal permanence
    facts and theories.

Tim J. Smith tim.smith_at_ed.ac.uk http//homepages.i
nf.ed.ac.uk/s9732397
14
Experiment
  • Hypotheses
  • Full occlusion Trigger will show
  • saccade preparation prior to the edit,
  • quicker recovery of maximum attention, and
  • the highest smoothness ratings.
  • Full occlusion Entry will show
  • a smooth increase to maximum attention following
    the edit,
  • be rated as the smoothest edit.

15
Questionnaire
  • Frame-by-frame, how smooth do you think the
    motion of the UFO was
  • in the centre of the screen?
  • very jerky (1) gt (2) gt (3) gt (4) gt (5) perfectly
    smooth no opinion
  • on the right edge of the screen?
  • very jerky (1) gt (2) gt (3) gt (4) gt (5) perfectly
    smooth no opinion
  • on the left edge of the screen?
  • very jerky (1) gt (2) gt (3) gt (4) gt (5) perfectly
    smooth no opinion
  • After a cut, did you ever expect the UFO to
    appear on the screen when it didn't? Yes No
  • At which time point during the whole animation
    did this happen most?
  • early - middle - late - throughout
  • How often did this happen?
  • Rarely - Occasionally - Half - Most -
    All of the time Can't say
  • Did the UFO ever seem to jump unexpectedly from
    one side of the screen to the other? Yes
    No
  • At which time point during the whole animation
    did this happen most? early - middle -
    late - throughout
  • How often did this happen?
  • Rarely - Occasionally - Half - Most -
    All of the time Can't say

16
Results
Exit Reaction Times
Entry Reaction times
17
Results
  • Attentional Fade-in duration (AFI)
  • Hypothesis Long AFI period (6 frames) will show
  • A higher mean level of attention, and
  • shorter period until full attention recovery.
  • Attentional Fade-in duration (AFI)
  • Hypothesis Long AFI period (6 frames) will show
  • A higher mean level of attention, and
  • shorter period until full attention recovery.
  • But, edits with long AFI durations are rated as
    being less smooth than those with a short AFI
    (3 frames).

18
Chronostasis
19
Continuity Editing (2)
  • How? 180 Rule1

1 David Bordwell and Kristin Thompson. (2001).
Film art an introduction, 6th edition
20
Visual Attention
  • The focusing of mental resources to the
    extraction and processing of a subset of the
    visual information existing in the scene.
  • As Overt Orienting
  • Fixations and Eye movements
  • E.g. Saccades
  • As Covert Orienting
  • increased receptivity to sensory information
    outside of the fovea
  • As Processing Resources
  • distributing cognitive resources between the
    perception, restructuring, and storage of the
    internally represented information.

21
Summary Did we achieve our goal?
  • Show how film editing can influence eye movements
    and the distribution of attention across a scene.
  • Occlusion by screen edge acts as trigger for
    saccade initiation.
  • Overlap of action can accommodate saccade
    duration.
  • Timing of object re-entry to coincide with
    recovery of full attention can maximise attention
    during the objects entire screen time.
  • Show how continuity editing can create the
    perception of continuity by hiding the edit in
    periods of low attention.
  • Editing decisions can be operationalised and
    their effects empirically tested.
  • Potentially, Edits can be hidden in saccadic
    eye movements.
  • Occlusion by screen edge creates potential for
    continuity.
  • But, viewers cant introspect on continuity.
  • Empirical evidence validates continuity editing
    rules.
  • Show how film editing can influence eye movements
    and the distribution of visual attention across a
    scene.
  • Show how Continuity Editing creates the
    perception of continuity by hiding an edit in
    periods of low attention.
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