Can a Robot Become a Movie Director? Learning Artistic Principles for Aerial Cinematography
Aerial filming is constantly gaining importance due to the recent advances in drone technology. It invites many intriguing, unsolved problems at the intersection of aesthetical and scientific challenges. In this work, we propose a deep reinforcement learning agent which supervises motion planning of...
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Zusammenfassung: | Aerial filming is constantly gaining importance due to the recent advances in
drone technology. It invites many intriguing, unsolved problems at the
intersection of aesthetical and scientific challenges. In this work, we propose
a deep reinforcement learning agent which supervises motion planning of a
filming drone by making desirable shot mode selections based on aesthetical
values of video shots. Unlike most of the current state-of-the-art approaches
that require explicit guidance by a human expert, our drone learns how to make
favorable viewpoint selections by experience. We propose a learning scheme that
exploits aesthetical features of retrospective shots in order to extract a
desirable policy for better prospective shots. We train our agent in realistic
AirSim simulations using both a hand-crafted reward function as well as reward
from direct human input. We then deploy the same agent on a real DJI M210 drone
in order to test the generalization capability of our approach to real world
conditions. To evaluate the success of our approach in the end, we conduct a
comprehensive user study in which participants rate the shot quality of our
methods. Videos of the system in action can be seen at
https://youtu.be/qmVw6mfyEmw. |
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DOI: | 10.48550/arxiv.1904.02579 |