I have just a little experience using markers for high speed film imaging and almost no experience for sports applications or tracking. No internet search yet so there may be many markers that I’m not familiar with. This thread could use some advice on marker options from those who have professional experience selecting markers for high speed video in biomechanical research.
1) Tape. Contrasting tape placed in reference locations. http://vimeo.com/21512296 If applied to the body one issue is that the tape may not move with the bones due to muscles bouncing, etc. Did the upper arm rotate or did the muscle with tape lag the rapid upper arm internal shoulder rotation?
2) Retro-Reflective Tape or Paint. One marker candidate is retro-reflective tape. It reflects light back in the direction that the light arrived from. Retro-reflective tape has the same glass beads that are used in the road signs to reflect the headlights of your car back to you. To use RRT put the markers on the object and place light sources very close and alongside the camera lens. Lighting is an issue, easiest to use in low ambient background light. The use of RRT with considerable ambient background light and especially in full sunlight may not be practical. ? 3M has technical information on its retro-reflective products.
http://vimeo.com/21529497
3) Markers with Patterns. I don’t know how the Kinovea tracker works. To improve chances of tracking would it be better to have the tracker work on the contrast & shape within the marker instead of between a marker and the varying background? For example, would high contrast markers with patterns such as these help the tracker?
1) Black circle surrounded by white ring
2) White circle surrounded by black ring
3) Circle half white and half black, etc.
4) Other, high contrast within the marker
5) Multi-markers, 3 circles close together.
6) A black rectangle - similar in size to the feature window? - with a white circle inside.
4) Balls as Markers. Spheres regardless of how they are oriented display the same shape and reflect light the same way. (A tennis ball seems to be an ideal object to track.) Therefore using small balls as markers seems like one option. Ping pong balls are very light weight. They would have to be rigidly attached. Velcro is an option but not completely rigid. Epoxy the ball to a machine screw, clamp, bendable aluminum strip or strap, etc. and attach that to the object? Ping pong balls add air resistance and that may not be negligible for some high speed applications such as on a tennis racket. Style is an issue.
5) LEDs. Are point light sources good candidates for tracking? These have been used in biomechanical research. But are they bright enough to be useful, probably not in sunlight. LEDs are manufactured in thin credit card shaped magnifiers. Do they also make other very small, light weight, self-contained LEDs with light weight, small batteries?
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“Tracking tennis/baseball balls is most probably out of reach without super high speed camera.”
I have not tried high speed video yet using the following set up.
Generally a very useful camera location for projectiles or balls is with the camera on or very near the trajectory and viewing parallel to the trajectory. If coming toward the camera images of objects get slowly bigger and if going away they get slowly smaller – but the image of the object moves very slowly in the frame in comparison to viewing the object on its trajectory from the side. [With bullets first surface mirrors are placed next to or on the trajectory looking back at the gun to protect the camera.]
Tracking. This set up viewing the ball going away after it has been struck or thrown is very favorable for tracking especially if the ball is viewed against a high contrast background. This view also tends to be very informative. It may show the effects of tennis ball spin or golf ball slice and also may show where the ball lands.
I’ve seen some golf trajectories and believe that golf balls are routinely tracked going away by golf software. A camera position often used in golf is from just behind and 1 meter above the golf tee but not exactly along the initial trajectory.
Tennis strokes, volleyball serves, baseball pitches, etc., can be viewed from behind and exactly parallel to the initial trajectory. I have not seen this view in high speed video of tennis serves probably because the camera has to be positioned higher (3+ meters) than a standard tripod reaches (2 meters). This makes the setup inconvenient for non-professional use. For example, I'd like to see high speed video of the initial trajectory of a kick serve as it leaves the racket. The path of the racket strings across the back of the ball could also be seen. Kinovea might be able to track the ball after the racket has moved off to the side especially if the court is the background.
For a video taken from behind and 1 meter below the trajectory/racket height using a Casio FH100 at 240fps -
Using video not optimized for setup I tried to track a tennis ball going away with Kinovea. K tracked the ball for a short distance away from the racket until the contrast deteriorated and then lost it. K reacquired the ball again after several frames when the ball passed in front of a dark green background. I just tried tracking a few times and don't recall any settings such as the search window. Does the feature window/search window continue on its previous path after the object track is lost?
I believe that tracking a tennis ball just after it is served could be a clean, informative and important tracking problem especially if observed exactly along the initial trajectory.
Motion Blur. Always use the fastest shutter speed possible to minimize motion blur and get a sharp image of the ball. I use 1/10,000s or faster. In addition, the along- trajectory view itself will also minimize motion blur.
If anyone is interested in tracking tennis serves or other objects along the trajectory with high speed video please describe your application.
You’ll see me at the US Open this year with my Casio FH100. I'll be in the stands sitting in the row with the proper height to video serves along the trajectory. #1 on my list is Stosur’s kick serve. Anyone going to the French Open?