Casual Authoring using a Video Navigation History
We propose the use of a personal video navigation history, which records a user's viewing behaviour, as a basis for casual video editing and sharing. Our novel interaction supports users' navigation of previously-viewed intervals to construct new videos via simple well-known methods, such as playlists. The intervals in the history can be individually previewed and searched, filtered to identify frequently-viewed sections, and added to a playlist from which they can be refined and re-ordered to create new videos. Interval selection and playlist creation using a history-based interaction is compared to a more conventional filmstrip-based technique. Using our novel interaction participants took at most two-thirds the time taken by the conventional method, and we found users strongly prefer using a history-based mechanism to find previously-viewed intervals compared to a state-of-the-art method. Our study concludes that users are comfortable using a video history, and are happy to re-watch interesting parts of video to utilize the history's advantages.
Presented in Ottawa, May 2014 at the Research Notes session of the GRAND Annual Conference.
Presented in Ottawa, May 2014 at the Research Notes session of the GRAND Annual Conference.