The two video cameras are standard, colour analogue NTSC cameras mounted side by side on a rig. The cameras were placed on the rig with a slight vergence of approximately 5 degrees towards the centre. The output of the stereo cameras was multiplexed into one video signal using field multiplexing, then sent to a Hitachi IP5005 video card. In this technique, a device containing a video switching integrated circuit selects the signal from one video stream as the odd field of the video output, while the signal from the other video stream becomes the even field. This requires to first de-interleave the odd-even fields of the video frames from each camera. Multiplexing video signals in the analogue phase has the advantage that it can be applied to virtually any video hardware system. Images from two cameras can be stored in a single video frame. Stereo image processing can be performed within the computer's memory using only one image processing board. Single video stream processing is thus transformed into stereo vision processing.
A weakness of the field multiplexing technique is that only half the vertical resolution of the original video frame from each camera is available, as two video streams are compressed into a single frame. One other weakness is the delay of 16.6ms between the images from the two video streams, which is inherent in the NTSC standard, or any other interlaced video/TV standard. That is, first all the lines of one field, let's say the odd lines, are processed, then all the lines of the other field. The field frequency is 60Hz in the NTSC standard, or 30Hz frame frequency, and hence there is a 16.6ms delay between fields.
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Synchronisation between the audio and video signals is implicit in the locked mode of the DV standard, which was used for the AVOZES recordings. Due to the audio signal being transmitted directly to the DV recorded, while the video signal undergoes the above mentioned processing, the video stream lags the audio stream by one video frame. This delay has deliberately not been corrected during editing of the AVOZES sequences, so any user of AVOZES must be aware of it and take it into account in their analyses.
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