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Watch A Baby's Face Change Color With Her Tiny, Normally Invisible Pulse

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MIT's image amplification system makes imperceptible movements and color changes visible.

Last summer, a group of MIT scientists debuted a new video amplification algorithm that exaggerates slight changes in movement or color, like a magnifying glass for moving images. Since then, they've made the open-source code available and started allowing anyone to upload videos and see the effect for themselves. The New York Times got inside the lab to see what they project is doing in this video.

Scientists at the Computer Science and Artificial Intelligence Laboratory (CSAIL) at MIT first presented "Eulerian video magnification" last year at SIGGRAPH, a computer graphics conference. Originally, the system -- which lets you identify from afar if a person is breathing, how fast their heart is beating and where blood is traveling in their body -- was designed to monitor the vital signs of neonatal infants without having to touch them.

It measures the color intensity of pixels and then amplifies any changes in that intensity, registering the slight reddening of your face in conjunction with your pulse, for example. You can apply the system to videos retroactively, to a scene from your favorite Batman movie, perhaps.

The researchers posted their code online in August, making it available for anyone to use for non-commercial purposes, though running the program was somewhat complicated. Now you can upload your own videos to the website for Quanta Research Cambridge, a CSAIL sponsor, and see the system work its magic.

[NYTimes]




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