Just before a marker disappears from occlusion, it may be partially occluded, causing noise, peaks, or other jumps in the capture data. During playback, you may notice that the marker appears to be moving normally, then it begins to fly off on an incorrect tangent. The Quality Bar shows this as a black area. These normally appear near the end of a data segment.
There are two methods of correcting bad data segments:
Using Gap Interpolation to Remove Noise
Gap interpolations are also used to interpolate between two segments where there is noise. The segment that contains the noise is split, then removed. Gap interpolation reconnects the two segments.
Timeline indicator positioned at the beginning of the noise
Because the Timeline indicator is placed in a segment, the Segment menu is activated in the Optical Options pane.
You now have three segments with the center segment containing the noise to be removed.
Two segments created
A gap is created. By default, its interpolation is set to Auto-Rigid Body which calculates the data based on the Rigid body.
Gap between two segments
If you want, you can change the Gap Interpolation. For example, the following figure shows the gap using Auto-Linear interpolation. For more information, see Filling Gaps with Interpolation.
Gap interpolated using Auto-Linear interpolation