Computer Animation
Computer Animation
Animation means giving life to any object in computer graphics. It has the power of injecting
energy and emotions into the most seemingly inanimate objects. Computer-assisted animation
and computer-generated animation are two categories of computer animation. It can be
presented via film or video.
The basic idea behind animation is to play back the recorded images at the rates fast enough to
fool the human eye into interpreting them as continuous motion. Animation can make a series of
dead images come alive. Animation can be used in many areas like entertainment, computer
aided-design, scientific visualization, training, education, e-commerce, and computer art.
Animation Techniques
Animators have invented and used a variety of different animation techniques. Basically there are
six animation technique which we would discuss one by one in this section.
Keyframing
In this technique, a storyboard is laid out and then the artists draw the major frames of the
animation. Major frames are the ones in which prominent changes take place. They are the key
points of animation. Keyframing requires that the animator specifies critical or key positions for
the objects. The computer then automatically fills in the missing frames by smoothly interpolating
between those positions.
Procedural
In a procedural animation, the objects are animated by a procedure a set of rules not by
keyframing. The animator specifies rules and initial conditions and runs simulation. Rules are often
based on physical rules of the real world expressed by mathematical equations.
Behavioral
In behavioral animation, an autonomous character determines its own actions, at least to a certain
extent. This gives the character some ability to improvise, and frees the animator from the need to
specify each detail of every character's motion.
This technology has enabled a number of famous athletes to supply the actions for characters in
sports video games. Motion capture is pretty popular with the animators mainly because some of
the commonplace human actions can be captured with relative ease. However, there can be
serious discrepancies between the shapes or dimensions of the subject and the graphical
character and this may lead to problems of exact execution.
In contrast the applications based on key-framing and motion select and modify motions form a
pre-computed library of motions. One drawback that simulation suffers from is the expertise and
time required to handcraft the appropriate controls systems.
Key Framing
A keyframe is a frame where we define changes in animation. Every frame is a keyframe when we
create frame by frame animation. When someone creates a 3D animation on a computer, they
usually dont specify the exact position of any given object on every single frame. They create
keyframes.
Keyframes are important frames during which an object changes its size, direction, shape or other
properties. The computer then figures out all the in-between frames and saves an extreme
amount of time for the animator. The following illustrations depict the frames drawn by user and
the frames generated by computer.
Morphing
The transformation of object shapes from one form to another form is called morphing. It is one of
the most complicated transformations.
A morph looks as if two images melt into each other with a very fluid motion. In technical terms,
two images are distorted and a fade occurs between them.
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