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The Technology Behind the Magic Yellow Line

CurtMonash writes "Fandome offers a fascinating video explaining how the first-down line on football broadcasts actually works. Evidently, theres a lot of processing both to calculate the exact location being photographed on the field — including optical sensors and two steps of encoding — and to draw a line in exactly the right place onscreen. For those who don't want to watch the whole video, highlights are here."

4 of 261 comments (clear)

  1. Re:Weathermen have been doing this for ??? by iluvcapra · · Score: 4, Informative

    Yeah - it is one guy and as long as he doesn't put on an annoyingly green tie - it all just works.

    There are several substantive differences:

    • The green or blue weather map is a straight chromakey, the matted background is opaque and the removed background is monochromatic. The first-down line/overlays have to be added to a surface of varying (but reasonably predictable) colors, and it's laid over the action, with objects "in front" (not grass) matted out of the overlay. This is very complicated.
    • The camera is in motion, panning and tilting while the overlay is happening. The weatherman always does his schtick in front of a camera on "lockdown," because if the camera moved, the weatherman would move (w/r/t the frame) on a different plane from his chromakeyed background.

    I'd read the article if it weren't slashdotted, it appears very interesting...

    --
    Don't blame me, I voted for Baltar.
  2. Youtube Mirror for the video by iammani · · Score: 4, Informative
  3. Re:Watch the video by Reality+Master+101 · · Score: 4, Informative

    The way we used to say this in the Hospital game is, "different-good is as bad as different-bad."

    --
    Sometimes it's best to just let stupid people be stupid.
  4. It's not just the yellow line by Animats · · Score: 4, Informative

    Not being a sports fan, I don't see much of this stuff, but I once visited the company in Silicon Valley that makes the gear. The "yellow line" is one of the easier applications. It's basically a camera with encoders driving a fairly simple video processor. Calibration is manual; there's a setup display that shows the normal lines of a football field, and someone aligns the corners to match the real image from the camera. When the generated image matches the real one, the system is in alignment.

    That's 1998 technology. The newer systems have gone way beyond that. Ads on billboards are sometimes replaced using the same system. Ads you see on the air may not be what people in the stadium are seeing. There's player tracking, ball tracking, the "virtual strike zone" for baseball, GPS-based tracking for NASCAR, and virtual billboard insertion into everything.