Visualizing the Passage of Time with Video Temporal Pyramids
Melissa E. Swift (1, 2), Wyatt Ayers (1), Sophie Pallanck (1),, Scott Wehrwein (1) ((1) Western Washington University, (2) Pacific Northwest, National Laboratory)

TL;DR
This paper introduces Video Temporal Pyramids, a novel method for visualizing long-term scene changes across multiple timescales, overcoming limitations of traditional timelapse videos and enabling detailed exploration of scene dynamics.
Contribution
We developed a new algorithm for creating video pyramids in the temporal domain and a Video Spectrogram for holistic scene analysis, enhancing long-term temporal visualization capabilities.
Findings
Enables alias-free visualization of long-term changes
Allows exploration of phenomena across multiple timescales
Facilitates discovery of scene dynamics through the Video Spectrogram
Abstract
What can we learn about a scene by watching it for months or years? A video recorded over a long timespan will depict interesting phenomena at multiple timescales, but identifying and viewing them presents a challenge. The video is too long to watch in full, and some occurrences are too slow to experience in real-time, such as glacial retreat. Timelapse videography is a common approach to summarizing long videos and visualizing slow timescales. However, a timelapse is limited to a single chosen temporal frequency, and often appears flickery due to aliasing and temporal discontinuities between frames. In this paper, we propose Video Temporal Pyramids, a technique that addresses these limitations and expands the possibilities for visualizing the passage of time. Inspired by spatial image pyramids from computer vision, we developed an algorithm that builds video pyramids in the temporal…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
Taxonomy
TopicsVideo Analysis and Summarization · Advanced Image and Video Retrieval Techniques · Generative Adversarial Networks and Image Synthesis
