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Adobe Premiere Elements 12 User Manual

Page 317

background image

poster frame

preview files

printing to tape

project preset

QuickTime (MOV)

raster

raw footage

real time

region coding

rendering

resolution

RGB

ripple edit

rolling edit

rough cut

sample rate

saturation

scene detection

scene markers

Sceneline

scrubbing

SECAM

A single frame of a clip, selected as a thumbnail to indicate the clip’s contents.

Files that store information about tracks and effects in a project. Preview files are created during the rendering process and stored

on the hard drive. They save time during the final export of a movie because the video edition application can use the information in the preview
files rather than render clips again.

Recording a digital video file to videotape.

A predefined set of values that can be used for project settings.

Apple Computer's format for video, sound, and 3D media.

A grid of pixels forming the image on a TV or computer screen.

Original, unedited film or video footage that has not been modified.

Instantaneous processing of data. In video, real time refers to effects and transitions you can preview without interrupting the rendering

process.

A DVD feature that restricts playback of a disc to players in a specific region.

The process of applying edits, effects, and transitions to video frames.

The number of pixels in each frame of video (for example, 640 x 480). All other things being equal, a higher resolution will result in a

better-quality image.

Red, green, blue. The three primary colors, which are used to display color on a computer monitor or TV screen.

The automatic forward or backward movement of clips in the Timeline in relation to an inserted or deleted clip.

The automatic change in the duration of an adjoining clip when a clip is inserted or extracted, or when the duration of a clip is altered.

A preliminary version of a video production, often assembled from lower quality clips than those used for the final cut.

In digital audio, the number of samples per second. The higher the number, the better the sound quality.

The strength or purity of a color. Saturation represents the amount of gray in proportion to the hue, measured as a percentage from

0% (gray) to 100% (fully saturated).

Automatic detection of scene changes in video clips. You can use scene detection when capturing video (though not when

capturing HDV), or you can use it on captured clips. Premiere Elements supports image-based scene detection.

See markers.

Provides a visual layout of media clips so you can quickly arrange your clips, as well as add titles, transitions, and effects.

Shuttling audio or video material forward or backward while previewing.

Systeme Electronique Couleur Avec Memoire, a TV format used mainly in Eastern Europe, Russia, and Africa. In these countries, TVs

support both SECAM and PAL, but DV camcorders and DVD players use only PAL. Therefore, Adobe Premiere Elements users in these countries
should use the PAL preset for projects and DVDs.

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