Paper
19 July 2002 Sampling theory for digital video acquisition: the guide for the perplexed user
Lenny I. Rudin, Ping Yu, Jean-Michel Morel
Author Affiliations +
Abstract
Recently, the law enforcement community with professional interests in applications of image/video processing technology, has been exposed to scientifically flawed salesmanship assertions regarding the advantages and disadvantages of various hardware image acquisition devices (video digitizing cards). These assertions state a necessity of using SMPTE CCIR-601 standard when digitizing NTSC composite video signals from surveillance videotapes. In particular, it would imply that the pixel-sampling rate of 720*486 is absolutely required to capture all the available video information encoded in the composite video signal. Fortunately, these erroneous statements can be directly analyzed within the strict mathematical context of Shannon's Sampling Theory. Here we apply the classical Shannon-Nyquist results to the process of digitizing composite analog video from videotapes to dispel the theoretically unfounded, wrong assertions.
© (2002) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Lenny I. Rudin, Ping Yu, and Jean-Michel Morel "Sampling theory for digital video acquisition: the guide for the perplexed user", Proc. SPIE 4709, Investigative Image Processing II, (19 July 2002); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.474733
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KEYWORDS
Video

Video surveillance

Analog electronics

Composites

Signal to noise ratio

Image processing

Image quality standards

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