Recent technological advances, such as increasingly sophisticated drones and cameras, have opened exciting new possibilities for cinematography. Most notably, film directors can now shoot scenes from a wide range of angles that were previously inaccessible and in far higher resolution.
Researchers at University of Zaragoza and Stanford University recently developed CineMPC, a new cinematographic system that relies on a fully autonomous drone that carries a cinematographic camera to film multiple targets autonomously, while following a director's instructions. The platform modulates various drone and camera parameters to satisfy these instructions. The team's innovative system, outlined in IEEE Transactions on Robotics, could bring a wave of innovation to the film industry and other sectors that can benefit from high-quality video footage.
"Existing solutions for autonomous drone cinematography revealed a common oversight, namely, none provided automatic control over camera intrinsic parameters (i.e., focal length, aperture, focus distance)," Pablo Pueyo Ramon, co-author of the paper, told Tech Xplore.
"In cinematography, controlling these parameters is essential to achieve different artistic and technical goals, such as a desired depth of field (parts of the scene shown in focus or blurred), or iconic shots like the dolly-zoom or vertigo effect. CineMPC fills this gap, determining autonomously the appropriate camera intrinsics capable of achieving a wide array of user-defined cinematographic instructions."
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