Knowledge (XXG)

Jerkiness

Source đź“ť

228: 146:. Cross colour refers to when any high frequency luminance content of the picture, close to the TV systems colour sub-carrier frequency, is interpreted by the analogue receiver's decoder as colour information. Moiré patterning is where an interference pattern is produced by fine scene detail beating with the line (or even 64:
Motion pictures are made from still images shown in rapid sequence. Provided there is sufficient continuity between the images and provided the sequence is shown fast enough, the
265: 289: 68:
interprets the sequence as continuous motion. However, some technologies cannot process or carry data fast enough for sufficiently high
284: 126:
of the individual drawings) so as to limit production costs, with the result that jerkiness tends to be apparent, especially on older
192: 299: 168: 258: 83:, the images are filmed and displayed at 24 frames per second, at which speed jerkiness is not normally discernible. 294: 251: 31: 65: 216: 76:
connection generally necessitates a greatly reduced frame rate, making jerkiness clearly apparent.
139: 127: 84: 235: 143: 119: 80: 278: 115: 87: 122:
films are typically made at reduced frame rates (accomplished by shooting several
49: 227: 123: 69: 91: 99: 73: 17: 103: 147: 234:
This article related to film or motion picture terminology is a
150:) structure of the device used to analyse or display the scene. 111: 107: 53: 95: 169:"Why Some Scenes In Your Favorite Action Movies Look Jerky" 239: 30:"Strobing" redirects here. For other uses, see 27:Perception of all frames while watching a film 259: 8: 266: 252: 72:. For example, viewing motion pictures by 48:) describes the perception of individual 159: 118:) refresh at 29.97 frames per second. 114:television displays (the standard in 7: 224: 222: 238:. You can help Knowledge (XXG) by 25: 226: 167:Ravenscraft, Eric (2017-06-03). 1: 102:television (the standards in 138:Strobing can also refer to 134:Other use in image glossary 316: 290:Film and video terminology 221: 29: 285:Film and video technology 106:) refresh at 25 or 50 ( 32:Strobe (disambiguation) 300:Film terminology stubs 66:central nervous system 217:Persistence of vision 110:) frames per second. 193:"Film term Glossary" 85:Television screens 40:(sometimes called 295:Visual perception 247: 246: 128:limited animation 52:while watching a 16:(Redirected from 307: 268: 261: 254: 230: 223: 204: 203: 197: 189: 183: 182: 180: 179: 164: 144:Moiré patterning 120:Animated cartoon 79:In conventional 21: 315: 314: 310: 309: 308: 306: 305: 304: 275: 274: 273: 272: 213: 208: 207: 195: 191: 190: 186: 177: 175: 166: 165: 161: 156: 136: 90:at even higher 62: 35: 28: 23: 22: 15: 12: 11: 5: 313: 311: 303: 302: 297: 292: 287: 277: 276: 271: 270: 263: 256: 248: 245: 244: 231: 220: 219: 212: 209: 206: 205: 184: 158: 157: 155: 152: 135: 132: 81:cinematography 61: 58: 54:motion picture 46:choppy footage 26: 24: 14: 13: 10: 9: 6: 4: 3: 2: 312: 301: 298: 296: 293: 291: 288: 286: 283: 282: 280: 269: 264: 262: 257: 255: 250: 249: 243: 241: 237: 232: 229: 225: 218: 215: 214: 210: 201: 194: 188: 185: 174: 170: 163: 160: 153: 151: 149: 145: 141: 133: 131: 129: 125: 121: 117: 116:North America 113: 109: 105: 101: 97: 93: 89: 86: 82: 77: 75: 71: 67: 59: 57: 55: 51: 47: 43: 39: 33: 19: 240:expanding it 233: 199: 187: 176:. Retrieved 172: 162: 140:cross colour 137: 78: 63: 50:still images 45: 41: 37: 36: 173:How-To Geek 124:film frames 92:frequencies 70:frame rates 60:Description 279:Categories 178:2023-12-14 154:References 130:features. 200:Elgin ISD 38:Jerkiness 211:See also 74:Internet 42:strobing 18:Strobing 88:refresh 104:Europe 196:(PDF) 148:pixel 100:SÉCAM 236:stub 142:and 112:NTSC 108:HDTV 98:and 96:PAL 44:or 281:: 198:. 171:. 94:. 56:. 267:e 260:t 253:v 242:. 202:. 181:. 34:. 20:)

Index

Strobing
Strobe (disambiguation)
still images
motion picture
central nervous system
frame rates
Internet
cinematography
Television screens
refresh
frequencies
PAL
SÉCAM
Europe
HDTV
NTSC
North America
Animated cartoon
film frames
limited animation
cross colour
Moiré patterning
pixel
"Why Some Scenes In Your Favorite Action Movies Look Jerky"
"Film term Glossary"
Persistence of vision
Stub icon
stub
expanding it
v

Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License. Additional terms may apply.

↑