6.5 KiB
Science Video Page-Style Case Pattern
This pattern is for PPT-style science videos: a deep article or model is reduced into a short public-facing video made of page-like shots, narration, and visual assets.
It is extracted from the old 30_CASE video storyboard case. The original topic, prompts, Codex JSON, output paths, and global text prohibitions are not carried forward.
Use When
Use this pattern when the target is:
- a 3-10 minute public-facing science, cognition, AI, product-thinking, or method-explainer video;
- a PPT-style video with page/shot images plus narration;
- a video that explains a mechanism, risk, contradiction, method, or model through metaphors and staged visual pages;
- not a drama short, not a full video-editing workflow, and not a character-continuity MV.
Core Pattern
source point
-> public-facing concern
-> controlling metaphor
-> video outline
-> shot/page list
-> shot/page deep spec
-> narration
-> visual asset brief
-> review and iteration
The case value is not the original topic. The reusable method is "page-style explanation": each shot behaves like a compact visual argument, not like a literal filmed scene.
Granularity
Default unit size:
- 6-10 units for a short explainer;
- 25-70 seconds per unit;
- about 90-260 Chinese characters per unit;
- one unit carries one logic function;
- one high-density method unit may be longer, but it still needs one clear governing frame.
Common unit functions:
| function | purpose |
|---|---|
| hook | create urgency or recognisable public concern |
| story anchor | give the viewer a concrete person, situation, or conflict |
| controlling metaphor | make the whole mechanism memorable |
| mechanism reveal | explain the hidden process or failure mode |
| practical frame | turn the concept into methods, checks, or choices |
| closing elevation | return to the larger judgment or changed mental model |
Local Unit Spec
For Video Workbench, put this in slides/sNN/sNN-unit-spec.md or use it as the basis for that file:
| field | purpose |
|---|---|
unit_id |
sNN identifier used by local files |
source_anchor |
source paragraph, GPT V2 stage-5 row, or accepted intake note |
narrative_function |
hook, story anchor, metaphor, mechanism, method, or closing |
core_message |
one sentence the viewer should retain |
page_copy |
short overlay text or subtitle-layer copy, if needed |
voiceover_intent |
what narration must explain beyond page copy |
visual_task |
what the visual asset must make visible |
asset_layers |
background, metaphor object, human element, diagram, overlay, audio |
continuity_link |
how this unit connects to the previous and next unit |
review_focus |
the two or three things to inspect first in iteration |
This is a local execution spec, not a final image prompt. Final prompt files remain Codex-owned sNN-vN-prompt.md artifacts when image generation is actually performed.
Page And Asset Layering
Separate layers before prompting or generating images:
| layer | owns |
|---|---|
| source logic | the concept, contradiction, risk, or method from accepted input |
| page text | the few words that may be rendered by PPT/video page layer |
| visual asset | metaphor scene, background, figures, diagram base, mood, composition |
| narration | full explanation, transition, examples, and punchline |
| review notes | whether the visual asset really carries the logic |
Do not treat "image contains no readable text" as a global rule. Decide per unit:
- If text must be editable or frequently revised, keep it in the PPT/video page layer.
- If labels, formulas, UI snippets, or diagram words are essential to the visual explanation, allow them only with explicit review criteria.
- If the image model is likely to garble precise wording, keep precise wording outside the generated image.
Shot/Page Design Method
For each unit, answer in this order:
- What is the viewer supposed to understand or feel at this moment?
- What is the simplest visible metaphor or situation that makes it concrete?
- What page text is useful, if any?
- What must narration explain that the image should not carry alone?
- Which part of the unit is high risk: logic, metaphor, composition, text placement, or visual generation?
- What would make the unit fail review?
The visual should not decorate the narration. It should do at least one of these jobs:
- compress an abstract mechanism;
- expose a contradiction;
- make a risk feel real;
- separate similar concepts;
- hold attention while narration explains a dense idea;
- signal a transition in the argument.
Review Dimensions
Review generated or drafted units against these dimensions:
| dimension | pass condition |
|---|---|
| logic clarity | one unit maps to one clear logic point |
| metaphor fit | the metaphor explains the point instead of becoming a side joke |
| public accessibility | a non-specialist can understand the visible situation |
| narration fit | voiceover adds explanation, not redundant caption reading |
| composition | image leaves safe space for page text if page text is planned |
| asset feasibility | the image can be generated or assembled without fragile exact text |
| continuity | the unit advances from the previous one and sets up the next one |
| medium fit | it remains a science/explainer page, not an accidental drama scene |
Small-Batch Strategy
Do not generate every unit first. Pick representative high-risk units:
- one hook or opening unit;
- one controlling-metaphor unit;
- one mechanism-explanation unit;
- one practical-method or dense information unit;
- one closing or elevation unit when tone is uncertain.
Record the selected batch in execution-plan.md, then track unit-level facts in slides/slides.md.
Abstracted Example Shape
## s03 Unit Spec
- narrative_function: controlling metaphor
- core_message: The tool is useful only when matched to the weight of the real-world problem.
- page_copy: two short lines, rendered outside the generated image unless the execution plan says otherwise
- voiceover_intent: contrast everyday low-risk use with high-stakes decision use
- visual_task: make the mismatch between lightweight confidence and large external risk visible
- asset_layers:
- background: large-scale risk environment
- metaphor object: small helpful tool that looks insufficient at scale
- human element: ordinary user facing the environment
- overlay: optional page text layer
- review_focus:
- risk scale is obvious
- metaphor does not become comic noise
- composition supports 16:9 page use