The present disclosure relates to an imaging device and an imaging method that are suitable for a video camera recorder performing imaging at an imaging frame rate different from a transmission frame rate of a video signal with respect to an external device.
In the related art, a method of changing an imaging frame rate of an imaging device to a desired frame rate and performing imaging has been executed to obtain a special video effect when a film is produced or a television broadcasting program is produced. If imaging and recording are performed with an imaging frame rate set to be higher than a reproduction frame rate and reproduction is performed at a normal rate, a reproduction image becomes a slow reproduction image. If imaging is performed with an imaging frame rate set to be lower than the reproduction frame rate and the reproduction is performed at the normal rate, a reproduction image becomes a fast reproduction image. Such imaging is called “variable frame rate imaging.”
As the imaging that is performed by changing the imaging frame rate, in addition to the “variable frame rate imaging,” “interval REC (intermittent recording)” for setting the number of frames recorded at one time and an interval time and automatically recording object video or “frame imaging” for performing recording only when a REC button is pressed is known.
In the imaging device such as a video camera recorder, a time code is added to an imaged video signal. Because the time code steps in units of frames, it is necessary to synchronize a carry frame number thereof at the frame rate. For this reason, instead of the time code synchronized with the imaging frame rate, the time code synchronized with the reproduction frame rate is added to the video signal imaged at the variable frame rate.
For example, Japanese Patent Application Publication No. 2005-39713 discloses a method of recording a plurality of kinds of time codes corresponding to a plurality of kinds of frame rates when recording is performed and selecting an appropriate time code from the plurality of kinds of recorded time codes when reproduction is performed.
In actual film production and the television broadcasting program production, a method of performing imaging by an imaging device, transmitting a video signal obtained by the imaging to an external device such as a recording device, and recording the video signal is executed. In this case, the video signal that is imaged by the imaging device is transmitted to the external device at a transmission frame rate determined according to a transmission standard. That is, when a video signal obtained by variable frame rate imaging is transmitted to the external device, it is necessary to convert the frame rate into the transmission frame rate determined according to the standard. In order to transmit the video signal to the external device at the imaging frame rate, it is necessary to design a new transmission standard for performing transmission at the imaging frame rate to be used exclusively for the imaging device performing the variable frame rate imaging. However, this is not realistic.
As shown in
d) shows a video signal that is read from the recording unit in the imaging unit and is output to the external device and
The time code is added to each video signal that is shown in
However, the video and the time code may not be synchronized in the video signal transmitted to the external device by the processing described above. For example, as shown in
The present disclosure has been made in view of the above-described problems and it is an object of the present disclosure to synchronize video and a time code in an externally output video signal when imaging is performed at an imaging frame rate different from a transmission frame rate of a video signal with respect to an external device.
According to an embodiment of the present disclosure, there is provided an imaging device which includes an imaging unit that performs photoelectric conversion with respect to object light and generates a video signal, a timing generating unit that instructs the imaging unit to generate the video signal at a predetermined imaging frame rate, a time code generating unit that generates a time code to be added to the video signal, and an output signal control unit that stores the video signal and the time code added to the video signal in a memory, reads a combination of the video signal and the time code stored in the memory at a second frame rate according to a transmission frame rate for when the video signal is transmitted to an external device, and outputs the combination.
According to another embodiment of the present disclosure, there is provided an imaging method which includes instructing to generate a video signal at a predetermined imaging frame rate, performing photoelectric conversion with respect to object light and generating the video signal at the imaging frame rate, generating a time code to be added to the video signal, storing the video signal and the time code added to the video signal in a memory, and reading a combination of the video signal and the time code stored in the memory at a second frame rate according to a transmission frame rate for when the video signal is transmitted to an external device, and outputting the combination.
By the configuration and the processing described above, the time code that is added when the imaging is performed is added to the video signal transmitted to the external device.
In the imaging device and imaging method according to the embodiments of the present disclosure described above, the time code that is added when the imaging is performed is added to the video signal transmitted to the external device. Therefore, video and a time code in an externally output video signal are synchronized with each other.
Hereinafter, preferred embodiments of the present disclosure will be described in detail with reference to the appended drawings. Note that, in this specification and the appended drawings, structural elements that have substantially the same function and structure are denoted with the same reference numerals, and repeated explanation of these structural elements is omitted.
Specific examples of a configuration and processing of an imaging device according to an embodiment of the present disclosure will be described in the order described below, with reference to the drawings.
1. Configuration Example of Video System according to Embodiment of Present Disclosure
2. Internal Configuration Example of Video Camera Recorder according to Embodiment of Present Disclosure
3. Example of Output Signal Control Processing according to Embodiment of Present Disclosure
4. Various Modifications
The video camera recorder 10 includes an imaging unit 100, a recording unit 104, an output signal control unit 109, and a video signal output unit 111.
The imaging unit 100 is configured using an image sensor and an image sensor driving unit that are not shown in the drawings and performs photoelectric conversion with respect to object light and generates a video signal. The recording unit 104 is configured using a video tape, a hard disk drive (HDD), or a memory card and records the video signal generated by the imaging unit 100. An output signal control unit 109 converts an imaging frame rate of the video signal acquired by the imaging unit 100 into a transmission frame rate (second frame rate) and outputs the video signal. The video signal in which the frame rate is converted by the output signal control unit 109 is transmitted to the external recording device 20 through the transmission cable 109. The video signal is transmitted to the external recording device 20 according to a standard such as a high definition serial digital interface (HD-SDI) standard.
The external recording device 20 is a device that records the video signal transmitted from the video camera recorder 10 and includes a video signal input unit 201 and a recording unit 202. The video signal input unit 201 is connected to the transmission cable 5 and the video signal output from the video camera recorder 10 is input to the video signal input unit 201. The recording unit 202 is configured using a video tape, an HDD, or a memory card and records the video signal input from the video signal input unit 201 as a video clip.
In this embodiment, the external device is applied to the external recording device. However, the present disclosure is not limited thereto. If the video signal transmitted from the imaging device is input to an external device, the external device may be applied to other devices such as a non-linear editing machine and a live switcher.
Next, the configuration example of the video camera recorder according to the embodiment of the present disclosure will be described with reference to a block diagram of
The imaging unit 100 includes an image sensor 101, an image sensor driving unit 102, and a signal processing unit 103. The image sensor 101 performs photoelectric conversion with respect to object light imaged on a light receiving surface not shown in the drawings by a lens not shown in the drawings, reads obtained signal charge, and converts the signal charge into an electrical signal. The image sensor 101 is configured using a charge coupled device (CCD) sensor or a complementary metal oxide semiconductor (CMOS) sensor.
The image sensor driving unit 102 drives the image sensor 101 on the basis of a synchronization signal supplied from the timing generator 105 to be described below. The signal processing unit 103 executes a gamma correction operation or RGB/YC conversion processing with respect to the video signal obtained by the image sensor 101. The recording unit 104 accumulates the video signal on which the signal processing is executed by the signal processing unit 103.
The timing generator 105 generates the synchronization signal to the image sensor driving unit 102 and the signal processing unit 103, as well as to the time code generator 106 and the output signal control unit 109 to be described below, from a basic clock.
The time code generator 106 generates a time code in synchronization with the synchronization signal supplied from the timing generator 105, steps the time code, and supplies the time code to the recording unit 104 and the output signal control unit 109 to be described below.
As examples of a mode in which the time code is stepped, two kinds of modes “free run” and “REC run” are known. The time code generator 106 steps the time code according to any mode. The “free run” is a mode in which a time code is stepped in synchronization with real time. The “REC run” is a mode in which a time code is stepped only when recording (REC) is performed.
A stepping mode of the time code (hereinafter called “TC mode”) is input by a user through the operation unit 107 to be described below and is supplied as the TC mode from the system controller 108 receiving an input value to the time code generator 106. The time code generator 106 steps the time code according to the “free run” mode or the “REC run” mode on the basis of the input TC mode.
When imaging according to the “variable frame rate imaging mode” is instructed through the operation unit 107 to be described below, the time code generator 106 steps the time code in synchronization with a frame rate set as a reproduction frame rate. For example, when the reproduction frame rate is set to 24 P, the time code generator 106 steps a lowest digit of the time code from “00” to “23” by one for each frame, carries the lowest digit, and steps the lowest digit again from “00.”
The video camera recorder 10 according to this embodiment has a “synchronous recording mode” and a “normal mode” as an imaging and recording mode and changes a method of stepping a time code by the time code generator 106, according to the selected mode. The “synchronous recording mode” is a mode in which imaging and recording are performed such that video and a time code in an externally output video signal are synchronized. The “normal mode” is a mode in which imaging and recording are performed without synchronizing video and a time code in an externally output video signal.
When the “normal mode” is set, as shown in
That is, in the “normal mode,” the time code that is added to the video signal recorded in the recording unit 104 in the video camera recorder 10 and the time code that is added to the video signal output to the external recording device 20 are individually generated. Meanwhile, when the “synchronous recording mode” is set, only the time code that is synchronized with the reproduction frame rate is generated.
The operation unit 107 is configured using a REC button to instruct to start or stop recording, another button, a knob, or a switch. The operation unit 107 converts operation content input by the user into an operation signal and supplies the operation signal to the system controller 108. The system controller 108 is configured using a central processing unit (CPU) and controls each unit forming the video camera recorder 10.
The output signal control unit 109 converts an imaging frame rate of the video signal output from the signal processing unit 103 into a transmission frame rate and outputs the video signal. The conversion of the frame rate is performed by writing the input video signal to the memory 110 and reading the video signal from the memory 110 at timing based on the transmission frame rate. As the transmission frame rate, a frame rate faster than the imaging frame rate is generally set. For this reason, when the frame rate of the video signal is converted into a frame rate synchronized with the transmission frame rate, the same video is transmitted repetitively in some video signals, such that a frame not including video is not generated. That is, among the video signals written to the memory 110, the same video signal is read repetitively and the video signal is output to the video signal output unit 111.
At this time, the output signal control unit 109 writes the video signal and the time code added to the video signal to the memory 110. In the case in which the “synchronous recording mode” is set, the time code added to the video signal is used as it is, even when the same video signal is read repetitively from the memory 110 multiple times. That is, processing for adding another time code synchronized with the transmission frame rate to the externally output video signal is not executed. Thereby, in the externally output video signal, the video and the time code are synchronized with each other.
The output signal control unit 109 adds a “valid frame flag” showing that video is valid only for one video signal with respect to the video signals read repetitively multiple times. Only the video signal to which the “valid frame flag” is added is reproduced and an effect of slow reproduction or fast reproduction is obtained in the reproduced image. Therefore, in the recording unit 202 (refer to
First, the description will be made with reference to
The output signal control unit 109 reads the video signal and the time code added to the video signal written to the memory 110 at time intervals of 1/60 sec. in synchronization with 60 P to be the transmission frame rate. At this time, in some video signals Vs, the same video is repetitively read multiple times to synchronize the frame rate of the video signal imaged at 40 P with a transmission frame rate of 60 P. In
Because the same video is read twice in repetition in the video signals Vs1, Vs3, and Vs5 shown in
As the external recording device 20 (refer to
The processing shown in
Returning to
The video signal output unit 111 outputs the video signal which is output from the output signal control unit 109 and which each signal is overlapped to the outside.
Next, an example of output signal control processing according to the embodiment of the present disclosure will be described with reference to
When the imaging and recording mode is not set to the “synchronous recording mode,” that is, the imaging and recording mode is set to the “normal mode,” the time code that is added to the externally output video signal is synchronized with the transmission frame rate and is stepped by one frame (step S2). By executing the processing, as shown in
In step S1, when it is determined that the imaging and recording mode is set to the “synchronous recording mode,” it is determined whether the imaging and recording mode is set to the “variable frame rate imaging mode” (step S3). When the imaging and recording mode is not set to the “variable frame rate imaging mode,” the same processing as the processing according to the related art in step S2 is executed. When the imaging and recording mode is set to the “variable frame rate imaging mode,” a setting object of the “TC mode” is determined (step S4).
When the “TC mode” is set to “REC run,” it is determined whether start of the recording is instructed by the user through the operation unit 107 (refer to
Returning to the flowchart of
According to this embodiment described above, the same time code is added to the video signal in which the same video is read repetitively when the frame rate is converted. Thereby, the video signal on which the variable frame rate imaging is executed and the time code can be synchronized with each other and can be transmitted to the external device. For example, even when imaging is performed using a plurality of imaging devices, such as when a 3D image is imaged, the time codes that are added to the video signal recorded inside and the video signal output to the outside can be matched with each other.
The “valid frame flag” becomes “Valid” only for one video signal with respect to the video signals in which the same video is read repetitively. Thereby, in the video signal that is transmitted to the external device, the time code steps whenever the valid image is updated. Therefore, in the external device, the input video signal and time code are recorded without resetting (regenerating) the time code and a recording image in which continuity of the time code is secured can be obtained.
Only the valid image in which the “valid frame flag” is “Valid” is recorded in the external device and a combination of the same video signal and time code as the video signal and the time code recorded in the imaging device can be recorded in the external device.
According to the embodiment described above, the time code synchronized with the video, the “valid frame flag,” and the “SYNC REC TRIGGER” overlap the externally output video signal and the video signal is transmitted. Thereby, in both the imaging device such as the video camera recorder 10 and the external device such as the external recording device, video clips that have the same time, the same length, and the same time code can be recorded.
According to the embodiment described above, the recording image that is recorded in the imaging device and has the low bit rate can be used for proxy editing and the recording image that is recorded in the external device and has the high bit rate can be used for main recording. That is, time and effort necessary to newly generate an image for proxy editing can be decreased.
In the embodiment described above, the imaging device that is configured as the video camera recorder 10 performs the variable frame rate imaging. However, the present disclosure is not limited thereto. The present disclosure may be applied to “interval REC” for intermittently recording video, “frame imaging” for performing recording only when a REC button is pressed, and imaging by a slow shutter.
It should be understood by those skilled in the art that various modifications, combinations, sub-combinations and alterations may occur depending on design requirements and other factors insofar as they are within the scope of the appended claims or the equivalents thereof.
Additionally, the present disclosure may also be configured as below.
(1) An imaging device including:
an imaging unit that performs photoelectric conversion with respect to object light and generates a video signal;
a timing generating unit that instructs the imaging unit to generate the video signal at a predetermined imaging frame rate;
a time code generating unit that generates a time code to be added to the video signal; and
an output signal control unit that stores the video signal and the time code added to the video signal in a memory, reads a combination of the video signal and the time code stored in the memory at a second frame rate according to a transmission frame rate for when the video signal is transmitted to an external device, and outputs the combination.
(2) The imaging device according to (1),
wherein the imaging frame rate is set to a frame rate lower than the transmission frame rate.
(3) The imaging device according to (1) or (2),
wherein the output signal control unit superimposes a valid frame flag showing whether the video signal is a valid image on the video signal and the valid frame flag is valid only for one video signal with respect to video signals of a same frame read repetitively from the memory multiple times.
(4) The imaging device according to any of (1) to (3),
wherein the output signal control unit superimposes a synchronous recording trigger showing timing of starting or ending of recording designated by a user, on the video signal.
(5) The imaging device according to any of (1) to (4),
wherein the time code generating unit steps the time code in synchronization with a reproduction frame rate of a video signal set to a frame rate different from the imaging frame rate.
(6) An imaging method including:
instructing to generate a video signal at a predetermined imaging frame rate;
performing photoelectric conversion with respect to object light and generating the video signal at the imaging frame rate;
generating a time code to be added to the video signal;
storing the video signal and the time code added to the video signal in a memory; and
reading a combination of the video signal and the time code stored in the memory at a second frame rate according to a transmission frame rate for when the video signal is transmitted to an external device, and outputting the combination.
The present disclosure contains subject matter related to that disclosed in Japanese Priority Patent Application JP 2011-193829 filed in the Japan Patent Office on Sep. 06, 2011, the entire content of which is hereby incorporated by reference.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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2011-193829 | Sep 2011 | JP | national |