Stabilizing Concepts

 
 
 

Stabilizing is a powerful process that represents one of the most common uses of the Tracker.

In most tracking the Tracker applies the reference motion to the desired element so that the two are locked. In stabilizing, the Stabilize filter uses the Tracker data to invert the analyzed motion to correct unwanted camera or subject motion.

You can stabilize any number of features in a composition:

1-point stabilizing The positional (location in X and Y) motion you want to eliminate is vertical, horizontal, or both vertical and horizontal.

2-point stabilizing The motion you want to remove involves scaling/rotation. It may also involve vertical/horizontal shifts.

With stabilizing, the shift values are inverted, for example, (3, -2) would become (-3, 2) before they are applied. This inversion results in an elimination of the motion.

The Stabilize filter uses the Tracker data to move the image so that the reference feature occupies the same position it did in the preceding frame. In other words, the reference feature stays still because the frame is being moved.

4-point stabilizing By adding two extra Tracker Analyzers you can perform 4-point stabilization and eliminate translation, rotation, scale, and pivot motion.