TY - GEN
T1 - Video inpainting of occluding and occluded objects
AU - Patwardhan, Kedar A.
AU - Sapiro, Guillermo
AU - Benalmio, Marcelo
PY - 2005
Y1 - 2005
N2 - We present a basic technique to fill-in missing parts of a video sequence taken from a static camera. Two important cases are considered. The first case is concerned with the removal of non-stationary objects that occlude stationary background. We use a priority based spatio-temporal synthesis scheme for inpainting the stationary background. The second and more difficult case involves filling-in moving objects when they are partially occluded. For this, we propose a priority scheme to first inpaint the occluded moving objects and then fill-in the remaining area with stationary background using the method proposed for the first case. We use as input an optical-flow based mask, which tells if an undamaged pixel is moving or is stationary. The moving object is inpainted by copying patches from undamaged frames, and this copying is independent of the background of the moving object in either frame. This work has applications in a variety of different areas, including video special effects and restoration and enhancement of damaged videos. The examples shown in the paper illustrate these ideas.
AB - We present a basic technique to fill-in missing parts of a video sequence taken from a static camera. Two important cases are considered. The first case is concerned with the removal of non-stationary objects that occlude stationary background. We use a priority based spatio-temporal synthesis scheme for inpainting the stationary background. The second and more difficult case involves filling-in moving objects when they are partially occluded. For this, we propose a priority scheme to first inpaint the occluded moving objects and then fill-in the remaining area with stationary background using the method proposed for the first case. We use as input an optical-flow based mask, which tells if an undamaged pixel is moving or is stationary. The moving object is inpainted by copying patches from undamaged frames, and this copying is independent of the background of the moving object in either frame. This work has applications in a variety of different areas, including video special effects and restoration and enhancement of damaged videos. The examples shown in the paper illustrate these ideas.
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U2 - 10.1109/ICIP.2005.1529993
DO - 10.1109/ICIP.2005.1529993
M3 - Conference contribution
AN - SCOPUS:33749614935
SN - 0780391349
SN - 9780780391345
T3 - Proceedings - International Conference on Image Processing, ICIP
SP - 69
EP - 72
BT - IEEE International Conference on Image Processing 2005, ICIP 2005
T2 - IEEE International Conference on Image Processing 2005, ICIP 2005
Y2 - 11 September 2005 through 14 September 2005
ER -