35

I need to automatically split video of a speech by words, so every word is a separate video file. Do you know any ways to do this?

My plan was to detect silent parts and use them as words separators. But i didn't find any tool to do this and looks like ffmpeg is not the right tool for that.

1 Answer 1

57

You could first use ffmpeg to detect intervals of silence, like this

ffmpeg -i "input.mov" -af silencedetect=noise=-30dB:d=0.5 -f null - 2> vol.txt

This will produce console output with readings that look like this:

[silencedetect @ 00000000004b02c0] silence_start: -0.0306667
[silencedetect @ 00000000004b02c0] silence_end: 1.42767 | silence_duration: 1.45833
[silencedetect @ 00000000004b02c0] silence_start: 2.21583
[silencedetect @ 00000000004b02c0] silence_end: 2.7585 | silence_duration: 0.542667
[silencedetect @ 00000000004b02c0] silence_start: 3.1315
[silencedetect @ 00000000004b02c0] silence_end: 5.21833 | silence_duration: 2.08683
[silencedetect @ 00000000004b02c0] silence_start: 5.3895
[silencedetect @ 00000000004b02c0] silence_end: 7.84883 | silence_duration: 2.45933
[silencedetect @ 00000000004b02c0] silence_start: 8.05117
[silencedetect @ 00000000004b02c0] silence_end: 10.0953 | silence_duration: 2.04417
[silencedetect @ 00000000004b02c0] silence_start: 10.4798
[silencedetect @ 00000000004b02c0] silence_end: 12.4387 | silence_duration: 1.95883
[silencedetect @ 00000000004b02c0] silence_start: 12.6837
[silencedetect @ 00000000004b02c0] silence_end: 14.5572 | silence_duration: 1.8735
[silencedetect @ 00000000004b02c0] silence_start: 14.9843
[silencedetect @ 00000000004b02c0] silence_end: 16.5165 | silence_duration: 1.53217

You then generate commands to split from each silence end to the next silence start. You will probably want to add some handles of, say, 250 ms, so the audio will have a duration of 250 ms * 2 more.

ffmpeg -ss <silence_end - 0.25> -t <next_silence_start - silence_end + 2 * 0.25> -i input.mov word-N.mov

(I have skipped specifying audio/video parameters)

You'll want to write a script to scrape the console log and generate a structured (maybe CSV) file with the timecodes - one pair on each line: silence_end and the next silence_start. And then another script to generate the commands with each pair of numbers.

13
  • 20
    As a oneliner: ffmpeg -i input.mkv -filter_complex "[0:a]silencedetect=n=-90dB:d=0.3[outa]" -map [outa] -f s16le -y /dev/null |& F='-aq 70 -v warning' perl -ne 'INIT { $ss=0; $se=0; } if (/silence_start: (\S+)/) { $ss=$1; $ctr+=1; printf "ffmpeg -nostdin -i input.mkv -ss %f -t %f $ENV{F} -y %03d.mkv\n", $se, ($ss-$se), $ctr; } if (/silence_end: (\S+)/) { $se=$1; } END { printf "ffmpeg -nostdin -i input.mkv -ss %f $ENV{F} -y %03d.mkv\n", $se, $ctr+1; }' | bash -x
    – Vi.
    Jun 13, 2016 at 14:28
  • 7
    @JohnSmith, Mac have old (pre-4) bash by default. Replace |& with 2>&1 |.
    – Vi.
    Sep 26, 2016 at 17:50
  • 4
    @giacecco To skip re-encoding add -c copy to the last ffmpeg command line. Other effects require more complicated script. Maybe I'll implement it and post as an answer someday...
    – Vi.
    Jun 1, 2018 at 15:29
  • 2
    How can one adjust the noise parameters, noise=-30dB:d=0.5 ? I have tried different values, but I am not getting silent_start and silent_end pairs, that is, sometimes one is missing.
    – innuendo
    Feb 10, 2019 at 15:41
  • 2
    @Vi. it seems you can earn 100 points by answering this question stackoverflow.com/questions/55057778/… Please take a look. Mar 11, 2019 at 23:23

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.