Lossy, Markers, Mjpeg – Adobe Premiere Elements 8 User Manual

Page 309

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USING ADOBE PREMIERE ELEMENTS 8 EDITOR

Glossary

Last updated 8/12/2010

lossy

A compression scheme that degrades quality. Lossy algorithms compress digital data by eliminating the data

least sensitive to the human eye, and offer the highest compression rates available.

luminance

The effect of the combined values for brightness and contrast.

M

Machinima

A method for creating movies that combines traditional filmmaking, animation, and virtual 3D gaming

technology. Machinima is the combined form of “machine/cinema” or “machine/animation.”

markers

DVD markers indicate chapters, scenes, and stop points for a DVD menu. In Adobe Premiere Elements,

DVD markers are also called scene markers. Clip markers signify important points within a clip. Timeline markers
indicate scenes, locations for titles, or other significant points within an entire movie. Clip markers and timeline
markers are used for positioning and trimming clips.

mask

See “

matte

” on page 304.

matte

The transparent area of an image, typically defined by a graphic shape or a bluescreen background. Also called

a mask.

MIDI

Musical Instrument Digital Interface. A standard used to share data between electronic music equipment and

computers.

mini-timeline

A timeline that appears at the bottom of the Monitor panel when the Sceneline is displayed. (See also

timeline

” on page 307.)

MJPEG

Motion JPEG. A compression standard used to convert each video frame into a compressed JPEG image.

MJPEG is best suited for broadcast-quality video, and is preferable over MPEG for footage that contains a great deal
of movement. See also

MPEG

” on page 304.

motion menu

A DVD menu that has a moving background image instead of a still image, animated buttons, or both.

MP3

MPEG-1 Audio Layer 3. Both a compression standard and a file format for digital audio.

MPEG

Motion Pictures Expert Group. Also, a type of compression and a video format. Unlike JPEG, where individual

frames are compressed, MPEG compression calculates and encodes only the differences between one frame and its
preceding frame.

MPEG-1

Compression standard used to convert analog video for use in digital applications. It was designed to deliver

near-broadcast-quality video through a standard speed CD-ROM. The compression ratio is about 100:1.

MPEG-2

Extension of the MPEG-1 standard. It was designed to meet the requirements of TV broadcast studios.

MPEG-2 is the broadcast-quality video found on DVDs and requires a decoder for playback.

MPEG-3

Developed for HDTV but became obsolete when MPEG-2 was discovered to adequately meet HDTV

requirements. Often confused with MP3.

MPEG-4

Builds on previous MPEG standards, adding support for streaming video and improved compression

schemes. Often used for video podcasting.

N

native editing

Refers to editing originally captured clips, both DV and HDV, at their original, uncompressed quality.

neutral colors

The range of grays, from black to white, that have no color. For neutral color areas, RGB values are

equal.

noise

Distortions of an audio or video signal, usually caused by interference.

noise reduction

The reduction of noise during recording or playback.

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