Technical Papers
Let’s Do the Time Warp
Tuesday, 11 August 10:45 AM - 12:15 PM | Los Angeles Convention Center, Room 150/151 Session Chair: Oliver Wang, Disney Research Zürich
Tuesday, 11 August 10:45 AM - 12:15 PM | Los Angeles Convention Center, Room 150/151 Session Chair: Oliver Wang, Disney Research Zürich
When painting in the real-world, the temporal history of strokes is lost, and powerful history-based image-editing operations cannot be used. This paper presents a set of physically based techniques to process and decompose a time-lapse video into a sequence of paint layers.
Jianchao Tan
George Mason University
Marek Dvoroznak
Czech Technical University in Prague
Daniel Sykora
Czech Technical University in Prague
Yotam Gingold
George Mason University
The RingIt technique recovers the spatial order of a set of still images that capture an event taken by a group of people situated around the event, allowing for a sequential display of the captured object.
Hadar Averbuch-Elor
Tel Aviv University
Daniel Cohen-Or
Tel Aviv University
Introducing an approach for synthesizing time-lapse videos of popular landmarks from large community photo collections. The resulting time-lapses show diverse changes in the world’s most popular sites, like glaciers shrinking, skyscrapers being constructed, and waterfalls changing course.
Ricardo Martin Brualla
University of Washington
David Gallup
Google Inc.
Steve Seitz
Google Inc., University of Washington
An algorithm for creating hyperlapse videos that can handle significant high-frequency camera motion and runs in real-time on HD video. The approach does not require sensor data, so it can be run on videos captured on any camera.
Neel Joshi
Microsoft Research
Wolf Kienzle
Microsoft Research
Mike Toelle
Microsoft Research
Matt Uyttendaele
Microsoft Research
Michael Cohen
Microsoft Research