Adobe 25520388 User Guide - Page 202

Improve speech analysis with Adobe Story scripts (CS5.5 and later), Select one or more clips

Page 202 highlights

USING ADOBE PREMIERE PRO 197 Editing sequences and clips Note: You can view the text of the file in a scrolling window. 4 Select Script Text Matches Dialog only if the imported script covers the recorded dialog verbatim. For example, if the reference script is the script from which the talent read their lines, select Script Text Matches Dialog. Select this option even if the recorded dialog is shorter than what the script file covers. 5 Click OK. The Import Script dialog closes, and the reference script is selected in the Reference Script menu. 6 Click OK. Improve speech analysis with Adobe Story scripts (CS5.5 and later) Speech analysis is more accurate if Adobe Story script data is associated with a clip. Adobe Premiere Pro automatically uses the Adobe Story script as a reference script. When Adobe Premiere Pro finds enough matches with the embedded script, it replaces the analyzed speech text with the embedded script text. Adobe Premiere Pro carries over the correct spelling, proper names, and punctuation from the reference script, benefits that standard speech analysis cannot provide. To find and fix more errors, you can make side-by-side comparisons of the text of the Adobe Story script with the text of the speech analysis. If a clip has a Story script attached to it, the script is displayed in the Embedded Adobe Story Script view in the Speech Analysis section of the Metadata panel. Compare the script displayed in this view to the results of the speech analysis displayed in the Analysis Text view below it. Note: The Embedded Adobe Story Script view is read only. You can't perform editing operations in it. To attach an Adobe Story script to a clip or clips: 1 Match the scene number of the clips to the scene numbers in the Adobe Story script. Adobe Premiere Pro needs the information so that it can match the clips to the correct scenes in the script. You can assign scene numbers to clips in the Project panel or the Metadata panel. 2 Select one or more clips in the Project panel, right-click and choose Attach Script File or select File > Adobe Story > Attach Script file. Note: An Adobe Story script cannot be attached to a Merged Clip. If, however, a Story script was attached to a component clip prior to the merge, the merged clip may be analyzed using the previously attached Story script. You can also import an Adobe Story script into OnLocation and then import the shots into Adobe Premiere Pro with the script metadata. OnLocation produces a list of shot placeholders for each scene. Either record these shots using OnLocation during production, or link the placeholder shots to their respective video files when you import the video files into OnLocation. In either case, OnLocation embeds the text for each shot from the original script into the metadata of the shot, and the information is retained when the shot is imported intoAdobe Premiere Pro. Select one or more clips When you want to perform an action that affects a clip as a whole, such as applying an effect, deleting a clip, or moving a clip in time, first select the clip in a Timeline panel. The Tools panel contains selection tools that can handle various selection tasks. ❖ Do any of the following: • To select a single clip, use the Selection tool and click a clip in a Timeline panel. • To select only the audio or video portion of a clip, use the Selection tool and Alt-click (Windows) or Option- click (Mac OS) that portion. Last updated 1/16/2012

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197
USING ADOBE PREMIERE PRO
Editing sequences and clips
Last updated 1/16/2012
Note:
You can view the text of the file in a scrolling window.
4
Select Script Text Matches Dialog only if the imported script covers the recorded dialog verbatim. For example, if
the reference script is the script from which the talent read their lines, select Script Text Matches Dialog. Select this
option even if the recorded dialog is shorter than what the script file covers.
5
Click OK.
The Import Script dialog closes, and the reference script is selected in the Reference Script menu.
6
Click OK.
Improve speech analysis with Adobe Story scripts (CS5.5 and later)
Speech analysis is more accurate if Adobe Story script data is associated with a clip.
Adobe Premiere
Pro automatically
uses the Adobe
Story script as a reference script. When Adobe
Premiere
Pro finds enough matches with the embedded
script, it replaces the analyzed speech text with the embedded script text. Adobe Premiere
Pro carries over the correct
spelling, proper names, and punctuation from the reference script, benefits that standard speech analysis cannot
provide.
To find and fix more errors, you can make side-by-side comparisons of the text of the Adobe Story script with the text
of the speech analysis. If a clip has a Story script attached to it, the script is displayed in the Embedded Adobe Story
Script view in the Speech Analysis section of the Metadata panel. Compare the script displayed in this view to the
results of the speech analysis displayed in the Analysis Text view below it.
Note:
The Embedded Adobe Story Script view is read only. You can't perform editing operations in it.
To attach an Adobe Story script to a clip or clips:
1
Match the scene number of the clips to the scene numbers in the Adobe Story script. Adobe Premiere Pro needs the
information so that it can match the clips to the correct scenes in the script. You can assign scene numbers to clips
in the Project panel or the Metadata panel.
2
Select one or more clips in the Project panel, right-click and choose Attach Script File or select File > Adobe Story
> Attach Script file.
Note:
An Adobe Story script cannot be attached to a Merged Clip. If, however, a Story script was attached to a component
clip prior to the merge, the merged clip may be analyzed using the previously attached Story script.
You can also import an Adobe Story script into OnLocation and then import the shots into Adobe Premiere Pro with
the script metadata. OnLocation produces a list of shot placeholders for each scene. Either record these shots using
OnLocation during production, or link the placeholder shots to their respective video files when you import the video
files into OnLocation. In either case, OnLocation embeds the text for each shot from the original script into the
metadata of the shot, and the information is retained when the shot is imported intoAdobe Premiere Pro.
Select one or more clips
When you want to perform an action that affects a clip as a whole, such as applying an effect, deleting a clip, or moving
a clip in time, first select the clip in a Timeline panel. The Tools panel contains selection tools that can handle various
selection tasks.
Do any of the following:
To select a single clip, use the Selection tool
and click a clip in a Timeline panel.
To select only the audio or video portion of a clip, use the Selection tool
and Alt-click (Windows) or Option-
click (Mac OS) that portion.