Color-appearance-model based fusion of gray and pseudo-color images for medical applications

2014 ◽  
Vol 19 ◽  
pp. 103-114 ◽  
Author(s):  
Tianjie Li ◽  
Yuanyuan Wang ◽  
Cai Chang ◽  
Na Hu ◽  
Yongping Zheng
2012 ◽  
Vol 200 ◽  
pp. 637-640
Author(s):  
Jing Liang ◽  
Yong Bin Zhao ◽  
Hui Gao

The iCAM (image color appearance model) as the most advanced modern color appearance model is constantly being put into use. In color images industry, the evaluation of the color difference is significant. This article will focus on color difference formula of image color appearance model and analysis its reasonable color difference calculation method, which reflects the advantages of image color appearance model.


2019 ◽  
Vol 2019 (1) ◽  
pp. 320-325 ◽  
Author(s):  
Wenyu Bao ◽  
Minchen Wei

Great efforts have been made to develop color appearance models to predict color appearance of stimuli under various viewing conditions. CIECAM02, the most widely used color appearance model, and many other color appearance models were all developed based on corresponding color datasets, including LUTCHI data. Though the effect of adapting light level on color appearance, which is known as "Hunt Effect", is well known, most of the corresponding color datasets were collected within a limited range of light levels (i.e., below 700 cd/m2), which was much lower than that under daylight. A recent study investigating color preference of an artwork under various light levels from 20 to 15000 lx suggested that the existing color appearance models may not accurately characterize the color appearance of stimuli under extremely high light levels, based on the assumption that the same preference judgements were due to the same color appearance. This article reports a psychophysical study, which was designed to directly collect corresponding colors under two light levels— 100 and 3000 cd/m2 (i.e., ≈ 314 and 9420 lx). Human observers completed haploscopic color matching for four color stimuli (i.e., red, green, blue, and yellow) under the two light levels at 2700 or 6500 K. Though the Hunt Effect was supported by the results, CIECAM02 was found to have large errors under the extremely high light levels, especially when the CCT was low.


2021 ◽  
Vol 2021 (29) ◽  
pp. 381-386
Author(s):  
Xu Qiang ◽  
Muhammad Safdar ◽  
Ming Ronnier Luo

Two colour appearance models based UCSs, CAM16-UCS and ZCAM-QMh, were tested using HDR, WCG and COMBVD datasets. As a comparison, two widely used UCSs, CIELAB and ICTCP, were tested. Metrics of the STRESS and correlation coefficient between predicted colour differences and visual differences, together with local and global uniformity based on their chromatic discrimination ellipses, were applied to test models' performance. The two UCSs give similar performance. The luminance parametric factor kL, and power factor γ, were introduced to optimize colour-difference models. Factors kL and γ of 0.75 and 0.5, gave marked improvement to predict the HDR dataset. Factor kL of 0.3 gave significant improvement in the test of WCG dataset. In the test of COMBVD dataset, optimization provide very limited improvement.


Author(s):  
Philipp Steininger ◽  
Karl D. Fritscher ◽  
Gregor Kofler ◽  
Benedikt Schuler ◽  
Markus Hänni ◽  
...  

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