Broadcast Engineering Blog

Will high frame rate video finally kill off interlace?

 

I visited a Dolby screening room yesterday for an introduction to Atmos, Dolby’s next-generation cinema sound platform. It is just a cinema product today, so not of pressing interest to broadcasters, but television was once only monophonic, and is now up to 7.1 surround, so who knows what could happen in the future? A key addition to surround systems is overhead sound from ceiling mounted speakers. We saw clips demonstrating how audio “objects” can be placed around the auditorium.

Atmos looks set to add to the cinema experience, and combined with high frame rate (HFR) digital projection, does differentiate from viewing at home.

I was distracted from the audio by the video presentation, one of the problems with being an engineer. The second clip was shot on film and with the superb projection in the preview theater, it was easy to see the crawling film grain all over the picture. But what I found most disturbing was the motion judder. It is really accentuated in a darkened room with projection to the periphery of vision. It was also the contrast from the first clip, which was video. 24-frame film does not look good with 2K digital projection; the temporal resolution just does not match the static resolution. I guess we have all got use to the wagon wheels rotating backwards!

However the next clip was 60fps, and stereo. This was like a veil being lifted. It was close to looking at the real thing—if you ignored some of the cue conflicts of depth perception inherent in stereo 3D.

The high frame rate does lift the viewer out of the marginal success of motion portrayal exhibited by legacy film and 25/30-frame television. The frame rate of the systems was chosen to be the lowest that viewers would accept, and a long time ago when the novelty of viewing moving pictures overcame objections about image quality. We have put up with in the interests of restricting the bandwidth for the delivery systems, or with film the limits of mechanical projection.

Peter Jackson’s Hobbit is pioneering high frame rate digital cinema, being shot at 48fps, although Doug Trumbull’s Showscan predates this by many years. I remember seeing a motion ride at the Luxor many NABs ago and it did look good—though the projection prints didn’t last long.

Broadcasters may smile knowingly at film judder, but 50/60-field interlace is hardly perfect. Interlace was a great idea in the 1920s, when TV processing was performed with a handful of vacuum tubes. Back then the technology needed for MPEG decoding was in the realm of science fiction. Interlace allowed a higher refresh rate at half the bandwidth of a progressive scan system with the same number of lines. The cinema trick of showing each frame twice to avoid flicker was not possible back then, that had to wait until digital frame stores were cheap enough to include in the receiver. The double (or triple) flash might avoid flicker, but the cadence of motion is still unnatural.

Imaging devices were so soft back in the early days of television that artifacts like inter-line twitter were not a problem. When electronic CGs came along the problems of interface did start to manifest. As a result CGs included “anti-aliasing” to reduce inter-line twitter. This scientific term sounded good in the marketing material, but what was really happening was that the vertical resolution was halved, giving the vertical resolution of a 250-line system from a 525-line standard. Interlace got around the frame flicker issue at the expense of vertical static resolution and motion artifacts (like the combing on moving vertical edges).

With advances in compression, new efficient schemes like AVC mean that high frame rate progressive systems could be used for delivery to the viewer. The EBU have been great advocates of this move, but there seems to be little interest from broadcasters who seem wedded to interlace, apart from a few progressive pioneers.

As 4K and HFR movies up viewers’ expectations, how much longer will broadcasters hang on to interlace? The usual excuse is backwards compatibility with SD material. How about forwards compatibility with the progressive displays that every consumer device now uses? I am sure many readers will have a view on this, please comment below.

Discuss this Blog Entry 2

Anonymous (not verified)
on Oct 24, 2012

I agree. 4K and 8K high frame rates (eg. 150 fps) without interlacing is what we should have.

Anonymous (not verified)
on Nov 6, 2012

Interlaced video is here to stay.

Interlaced saves broadcasters some bandwidth. Interlaced makes it possible to have 1080i resolution on a channel that cannot reasonably carry high-quality 1080p using the required mpeg2 encoding/decoding technology that was available when the digital broadcast standards were written.

Interlaced also makes it possible to carry several standard definition programs on a single channel.

Most people cannot even see the jaggies unless they look for them, just like most people cannot even see the rainbow effect on a DLP television.

There is nothing stopping cable and sattelite broadcasters from adding newer encoding/decoding technologies to their set-top boxes. Televisions could keep up with the feature set incrementally over time.

This will not result in the death of interlaced video. It will only result in more confusion and expense for dubious gains in a technology that already exceeds the needs of the average consumer.

If people that wrote the digital broadcast standards had thought back less to the existing CRT raster scan, and forward more to the flat-panel home theater experience, they might have put the burden of backward-compatibility with older interlaced displays at fixed resolution squarely on the shoulders of the converter box manufacturers, where it truly belonged, and removed interlaced video completely from the broadcast standard when they had the chance.

Then they could have included a core mandatory standard with more low resolution progressive modes that could transmit at lower bandwidth with higher bits per pixel, as well as optional high resolution progressive modes for more advanced home theater applications in the future, and left the implementation details of the more advanced feature set to future generations of technologists.

There could even have been an upgradeability specification that mandated the capacity to add next-generation reception features like H.264 etc. through firmware upgrades.

For now we are stuck with interlaced broadcasts, comb jaggies and all. Interlaced video is staying put for the immediate future. It adds flexibility to the producer's lineup. Cable and sattelite and broadcast equipment has to remain compatible with bandwidth-sparing interlaced video on both the transmitting and receiving end, or lose market share.

The younger crowd tolerates tiny pictures on laptops and mobile phones and dvd players in minivans, but pretends that live broadcasts of cinema-like progressive-scan home theater is essential for human life.

Meanwhile, the modern unfunded credit card spending spree for high-tech toys unfortunately arose in the midst of an interest-rate-fueled housing bubble and a perpetual energy crisis.

This amounted to the return to savings-stealing stagflation of the 1970's and widespread personal bankruptcies, new oil wars, billionaire bailouts, and oh yes we must not forget the creation of entirely new high-tech anti-terrorist bureaucracies to spy on us illegally using data mining megacomputers and high-definition face recognition equipment.

All this misplacement of priorities in an aging population has reduced the net worth of the average working family close to zero or below, leaving the eventual retirement and retreat into old age recreation of the next three generations in a row looking increasingly like an impossibility every day. Yet somehow, interlaced video is important.

At some point it becomes necessary to drop a few zeros from the end of the multimedia standard in order to add a few zeros to the end of the bank balance.

In other words, there may be an emerging alternate definition for the catchphrase, 'get real'.

Post new comment
Sign In or register to use your Broadcast Engineering ID
(optional)
What's Broadcast Engineering Blog?

Our newsletter writers air their personal views about what ever is topical in these times of great change within the broadcast sector.

Blog Archive