91Èȱ¬

COGNITUS

A system to capture, process and distribute user-generated content from many different users, making it suitable for use on UHD services.

Published: 1 January 2016

Smartphone cameras and social media networks allow for the incredibly fast distribution of user-generated content (UGC) which is increasingly important in the coverage of news stories and live events. COGNITUS is a system that coordinates the capture of footage from many different users and up-converts this – all within an interface that allows the producer to easily create programmes and packages from the material and then distribute them to audiences in ultra-high definition (UHD).

Project from 2016 - 2018

Why It Matters

Anyone with a mobile phone or a connected device is potentially able to cover a live event or news story wherever they are and give producers different perspectives that can enhance existing coverage. However, trying to manage a potentially endless number of sources can add complications and complexity. Submissions can be delivered via a number of different routes that need to be monitored or imported, or the footage could be in many different resolutions because it has been captured by many different types of device. With the development of UHD and HDR production, video may not be of a high enough quality, and the distribution of this high quality content to various devices over limited capacity networks needs very efficient compression.

aims to tackle these problems – and bring some additional benefits too.  Our system synchronises footage captured with our app, effectively enabling a crowdsourced, jointly created production at the highest video quality.

What We’re Doing

In the first half of the COGNITUS project we have established the requirements for UGC acquisition and curation by users and systems, and developed a number of prototype technologies through collaborative research. A number of UGC quality enhancements and semantic enrichment techniques have been produced - in particular the 91Èȱ¬ has produced significant developments with .

COGNITUS conducted initial tests of the technology at the Edinburgh Festival in August 2017. Contributors (recruited specially for the trials) attended the festival, and captured street performances and shows from around the city. The COGNITUS user generated festival footage was then processed to enhance the videos for broadcast services. A large number of clips were contributed and you can .

For the next stage in the project, COGNITUS went bigger and better through improving the current technology prototypes, to provide a modular system which deals with acquisition, enhancement and distribution of UGC content. COGNITUS were back at the Edinburgh Festival in 2018 to conduct larger scale trials with more users attending the festival, plus two performances of the Royal Edinburgh Military Tattoo. Using some of the users’ own words, COGNITUS users ‘soaked up the vibes’, and ‘ventured into the unknown’ (the theme of the festival) to experience the ‘cascade of colour and culture’ and capture their own personal perspectives on the performers, crowds, and ambience to share their experiences. Over 1000 video clips were generated by our users, which now act as a valuable pool to draw on to be incorporated into broadcast services, and/or be used for further research and development into video enhancements. See some of the results on the .

How It Works

The volume of data associated with is at least eight times that of HD, and efficient video compression technology is required to handle such an enormous amount of information. The to tackle this problem and 91Èȱ¬ R&D’s Turing codec is a fast software implementation of this new codec standard. The Turing codec enables efficient adaptive delivery of COGNITUS videos to audiences, but also means the enhanced UGC footage is stored efficiently in the COGNITUS repository.

As part of the video enhancement, we have also developed COGNITUS to dynamically enhance footage with , as well as a video quality assessment framework.  More detail on all these things can be found on .

Outcomes

The project will deliver a proof of concept to demonstrate the power of social creativity in a coordinated way, through trials at real-life large events such as big arts, music or sport events. These use cases are just some examples of the fascinating and potentially unlimited new services that could be unleashed by the combination of UHD broadcasting technology and UGC that COGNITUS opens up.

Horizon 2020

COGNITUS is a innovation project and has received funding from the European Union. The project includes , led by 91Èȱ¬ R&D, and brings together researchers and experts in video broadcasting, processing and analytics, with the objective of exploring innovative technology, to push the boundaries of conventional broadcasting.

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Project Team

  • Marta Mrak

    Marta Mrak

    Lead R&D Engineer
  • Saverio Blasi

    Saverio Blasi

    Lead Research Engineer
  • Lianne Kerlin

    Lianne Kerlin

    Research Scientist
  • Helene Waters

    Collaborative Project Administrator, External Relations
  • Fiona Rivera (PhD)

    Fiona Rivera (PhD)

    Senior R&D Development Producer

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