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Coded exposure photography (flutter shutter)[edit]

Photography is often said to be ill served by motion blur, despite its many artistic uses.[1] Coded exposure photography (otherwise known as 'flutter shutter') is a photographic technique designed to combat the effects of the "noise/blur dilemma".[2][3] "Flutter shutter" is a general term that applies to any computer algorithm that results in a 'randomised exposure sequence'.[4]

Digital Camera

Development[edit]

Most conventional camera's utilise single-exposure photography. Through this method, moving objects or camera movement can cause motion blur.[5]



Application[edit]

Future innovations[edit]

See also[edit]



Notes and references[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ pixflow (2019-01-15). "Motion Blur Effect | The Good, Bad, What, Why & How". Pixflow blog. Retrieved 2019-05-05.
  2. ^ Udacity (2016-06-06), Flutter Shutter Camera, retrieved 2019-04-28
  3. ^ "Optimizing flutter shutter to minimize camera blur". ScienceDaily. Retrieved 2019-04-28.
  4. ^ Tendero, Yohann; Morel, Jean-Michel. "A Theory of Optimal Flutter Shutter for Probabilistic Velocity Models". SIAM Journal on Imaging Sciences. 9 (1): 445–480. doi:10.1137/15M1035872. ISSN 1936-4954.
  5. ^ "Coded Exposure Photography (Flutter Shutter Deblur, SIGGRAPH 2006)". web.media.mit.edu. Retrieved 2019-05-06.

Further reading[edit]

External links[edit]