Shaped video – Grass Valley Switcher Products User Manual

Page 134

Advertising
background image

134

Switcher Products — Protocols Manual

Section 6 — Still Store Image File Format

For SD formats CCIR 601 defines the basic video signal levels used by the
still store and the conversion between RGB and Y, Cr, Cb as:

Y = 0.299R + 0.587G + 0.114B

Cr = 0.713 (R - Y) = 0.500R - 0.419G - 0.081B

Cb = 0.564 (B - Y) = 0.500B - 0.169R - 0.331G

For HD formats SMPTE 274M (1920 x 1080) and 296M (1280 x 720) specify:

Y = 0.2126R + 0.7152G + 0.0722B

Cr = (0.5/(1 - 0.2126)) * (R - Y)

Cb = (0.5/(1 - 0.0722) * (B - Y)

In addition, headroom is specified for overshoot and undershoot.

Black is a Y code word of 64

White is a Y code word of 940

Cr and Cb sit on a pedestal of 512 to avoid negative numbers and has a
range of ± 448 about this central value.

These factors need to be taken into account when scaling values.

Cr and Cb are half the bandwidth of Y. Proper filtering should be applied
during RGB to Y, Cr, Cb conversion to avoid aliasing. Half the Cr and Cb
samples are then discarded. Cr and Cb are both derived from the same
sample (first, third, fifth, etc.).

In addition, code words below 4 and above 1019 are reserved for sync and
control words. The Y, Cr, and Cb values must be limited accordingly.

While CCIR 601, SMPTE 274M and SMPTE 296M specifies pixels per line
and the number of lines per field, SMPTE RP-187 does a better job of
defining things. RP-187 specifies images in terms of a “clean aperture”
(what the end image will be cropped to) and a “production aperture.” The
still store stores the entire production aperture. However, cropping and
positioning is done in “screen units” (also defined in RP-187) that are based
on clean aperture. Note that screen units are different for 4:3 and 16:9 aspect
ratios.

Shaped Video

Modern video production equipment usually supports two mechanisms of
transferring video between equipment.

The most common approach used in all digital environments is known as
“shaped video” because the video produced by one device has already
been modified by its accompanying key. The receiving device “cuts a hole”
in the background image and adds the incoming video to it without further
processing.

Advertising