Traditional cinematography has relied for over a century on a well-established set of editing rules, called continuity editing, to create a sense of situational continuity. Despite massive changes in visual content across cuts, viewers in general experience no trouble perceiving the discontinuous flow of information as a coherent set of events. However, Virtual Reality (VR) movies are intrinsically different from traditional movies in that the viewer controls the camera orientation at all times. As a consequence, common editing techniques that rely on camera orientations, zooms, etc., cannot be used. In this paper we investigate key relevant questions to understand how well traditional movie editing carries over to VR, such as: Does the per...
In spite of their striking differences with real-life perception, films are perceived and understood...
In this work, we show how the use of flickering in Cinematic Virtual Reality (CVR) content can not o...
An everyday example of change blindness is our difficulty to detect cuts in an edited moving-image. ...
Virtual Reality (VR) has grown since the first devices for personal use became available on the mark...
Virtual Reality (VR) is gaining popularity in recent years due to the commercialization of personal ...
In spite of their striking differences with real-life perception, films are perceived and understood...
This paper introduces a cognitive psychological experiment that was conducted to analyze how traditi...
In spite of their striking differences with real-life perception, films are perceived and understood...
Although we experience the visual world as a continuous, richly detailed space we often fail to noti...
Institute for Communicating and Collaborative SystemsThe intention of most film editing is to create...
We tested whether viewers have cognitive control over their eye movements after cuts in videos of re...
Abstract Professionally edited videos entail frequent editorial cuts – that is, abrupt image changes...
This Document is Protected by copyright and was first published by Frontiers. All rights reserved. i...
How do we know when something is finishing? In everyday life there are no clips, cuts or frames that...
An important aspect of event cognition is the segmentation of activity into events. However, much of...
In spite of their striking differences with real-life perception, films are perceived and understood...
In this work, we show how the use of flickering in Cinematic Virtual Reality (CVR) content can not o...
An everyday example of change blindness is our difficulty to detect cuts in an edited moving-image. ...
Virtual Reality (VR) has grown since the first devices for personal use became available on the mark...
Virtual Reality (VR) is gaining popularity in recent years due to the commercialization of personal ...
In spite of their striking differences with real-life perception, films are perceived and understood...
This paper introduces a cognitive psychological experiment that was conducted to analyze how traditi...
In spite of their striking differences with real-life perception, films are perceived and understood...
Although we experience the visual world as a continuous, richly detailed space we often fail to noti...
Institute for Communicating and Collaborative SystemsThe intention of most film editing is to create...
We tested whether viewers have cognitive control over their eye movements after cuts in videos of re...
Abstract Professionally edited videos entail frequent editorial cuts – that is, abrupt image changes...
This Document is Protected by copyright and was first published by Frontiers. All rights reserved. i...
How do we know when something is finishing? In everyday life there are no clips, cuts or frames that...
An important aspect of event cognition is the segmentation of activity into events. However, much of...
In spite of their striking differences with real-life perception, films are perceived and understood...
In this work, we show how the use of flickering in Cinematic Virtual Reality (CVR) content can not o...
An everyday example of change blindness is our difficulty to detect cuts in an edited moving-image. ...