The effects of spatial and temporal video distortion on lie detection performance
CHI '02 Extended Abstracts on Human Factors in Computing Systems
Assessing lag perception in electronic sketching
Proceedings of the 7th Nordic Conference on Human-Computer Interaction: Making Sense Through Design
Evaluating the impact of frame rate on video based human action recognition
Proceedings of the 27th Conference on Image and Vision Computing New Zealand
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The new generation of digital CCTV systems can be tailored to serve a wide range of security requirements. However, many digital CCTV systems produce video which is insufficient in video quality to support specific security tasks, such as crime detection. We report a study investigating the impact of lowering frame rates on an observer's ability to distinguish between crime and no crime events from post-event recorded video. 80 participants viewed 32 video scenes at 1, 5, 8, and 12 frames per second (fps). The task required observers to determine if one of three possible events had occurred. Results showed that the number of correct detections, task confidence decreased significantly at 8 fps and lower. Our results provide CCTV practitioners with a minimum frame rate level (8 fps) for event detection, a task performed by CCTV users of varying skill and experience.