Converting a standard video into slow motion may sound like a simple concept, but actually requires tons of effort, time and skill to master the art. Simply recording slow motion video (like on your phone), is also a tricky affair. If you don’t record enough frames, the resulting slow-mo becomes blurry, choppy and frankly, unwatchable.
This is where the wonderful field of computer vision (CV) steps in. Researchers from NVIDIA have delved into this field, and developed a CV algorithm that can convert standard videos into high quality slow motion videos. The deep learning model, powered by convolutional neural networks, turns a 30-frames-per-second video into a jaw-dropping 240-frames-per-second slow motion video.
The system was trained (using NVIDIA Tesla V100 GPUs and cuDNN) using 1,132 video clips with 240 frames-per-second, containing 300,000 individual video frames. Post the training process, the convolutional neural network was able to predict extra frames in a 30-frames-per-second video. A separate dataset was used to validate the accuracy of the system. Using a series of clips from a popular YouTube series ‘The slow mo guys’, the system generated 4 times slower videos with a stunning high resolution accuracy.
To get a more in depth feel for the technology, you can read NVIDIA’s blog post and research paper. Also, check out the below video which shows how this deep learning system works:
This is not the first attempt to use machine learning for manipulating videos, but it’s certainly unique in the way NVIDIA have approached the challenge. Of course since it’s NVIDIA, it’s no surprise that the resulting slow-mo is gorgeous. The research paper is a must-read for any data scientist interested in working in the computer vision field – it contains a detailed explanation of how the researchers arrived at the model after several experiments.
Once NVIDIA polishes up the algorithm, and we see smartphones getting more and more computationally powerful, I expect a quick adoption rate for this technology. It’s also a much cheaper alternative compared to the other options available in the market currently.
Senior Editor at Analytics Vidhya.Data visualization practitioner who loves reading and delving deeper into the data science and machine learning arts. Always looking for new ways to improve processes using ML and AI.
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Where and how one can try this?
Hi Kumarswamy, NVIDIA has not open sourced the code for this. I expect them to commercialize this into their products once they have polished the algorithm. What they have done, however, is release their approach in the research paper I've linked above. That will give you an excellent and detailed idea of how the algorithm was formed and how it works.