Definitions for "Deinterlacing"
Deinterlacing is the complex process that converts a traditional interlaced video source into the progressive scan format required by modern high definition displays. However, not all deinterlacing processors are equal, and some of the other interlacers on the market will leave you looking at noisy artifacts and motion blurs. Not ours! DVDO technology delivers state-of-the-art progressive-scan video for the best possible picture from interlaced video sources enabling flawless, seamless, source-adaptive and motion-adaptive deinterlacing.
Technique of converting an interlaced video image to a progressive video image.
The process of converting an interlaced-scan video signal (where each frame is split into two sequential fields) to a progressive-scan signal (where each frame remains whole). De-interlacers are found in digital TVs and progressive-scan DVD players. More advanced de-interlacers include a feature called 3-2 pulldown processing. For TVs, de-interlacing is often referred to as "line-doubling" or "upconversion."