New colour appearance scales under high dynamic range conditions

2021 ◽  
Vol 2021 (29) ◽  
pp. 175-178
Author(s):  
Lv Xi ◽  
Ming Ronnier Luo

New colour appearance scales close to daily experience and image quality enhancement are highly desired including whiteness, blackness, vividness and depth. This article describes a new experiment to accumulate the data under HDR (high dynamic range) conditions. The data were then used to test the performance of different colour appearance scales such as CIELAB and CAM16-UCS plus the recent extension by Berns' Vab*, Dab*. The results showed those Berns' scales gave a reasonable performance. However, it was found no scale is capable of predicting colour appearance data covering a wide dynamic range. New scales were developed based on the absolute scales of brightness and colourfulness of CAM16-UCS and gave accurate predictions to the data.

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Lv Xi ◽  
Luo Ming Ronnier

New colour appearance scales close to daily experience and image quality enhancement are highly desired including whiteness, blackness, vividness and depth. This article describes a new experiment to accumulate the data under HDR (high dynamic range) conditions. The data were then used to test the performance of different colour appearance scales such as CIELAB and CAM16-UCS plus the recent extension by Berns’ Vab*, Dab*. The results showed those Berns’ scales gave reasonable performance. However, there was no scale capable of predicting colour appearance data covering a wide dynamic range. New scales were developed based on the absolute scales of brightness and colourfulness of CAM16-UCS and gave accurate prediction to the data.


2007 ◽  
Vol 38 (1) ◽  
pp. 1343-1346 ◽  
Author(s):  
Fang-Cheng Lin ◽  
Cheng-Yu Liao ◽  
Lin-Yao Liao ◽  
Yi-Pai Huang ◽  
Han-Ping D. Shieh ◽  
...  

2021 ◽  
pp. 1-1
Author(s):  
Aliaksei Mikhailiuk ◽  
Maria Perez-Ortiz ◽  
Dingcheng Yue ◽  
Wilson Samuel Suen ◽  
Rafa Mantiuk

Author(s):  
Irwan Prasetya Gunawan ◽  
Ocarina Cloramidina ◽  
Salmaa Badriatu Syafa'ah ◽  
Guson Prasamuarso Kuntarto ◽  
Berkah I Santoso

2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
A. Z. Andis Arietta

AbstractHemispherical photography (HP) is one of the most commonly employed methods to estimate forest canopy structure and understory light environments. Traditional methods require expensive, specialized equipment, are tedious to deploy, and are sensitive to exposure settings. In contrast, modern smartphone cameras are readily available and make use of ever-improving software to produce images with high dynamic range and clarity, but lack suitable hemispherical lenses. Thus, despite the fact that almost all ecologists and foresters carry a high-powered, image processing device in our pockets, we have yet to fully employ it for the purpose of data collection. As an alternative, hemispherical images can be extracted from spherical panoramas produced by many smartphone camera applications. I compared hemispherical photos captured with a digital single lens reflex camera and 180° lens to those extracted from smartphone spherical panoramas (SSP) for 72 sites representing a range of canopy types and densities. I estimated common canopy and light measures (canopy openness, leaf area index, and global site factor) as well as image quality measures (total gap area, number of gaps, and relative gap size) to compare methods. The SSP HP method leverages built-in features of current generation smartphones including exposure metering over restricted field-of-view, high dynamic range tonal correction, computational sharpening, high pixel density, and automatic leveling via the phone’s built-in gyroscope to yield an accurate alternative to traditional HP in canopy estimation. Although the process of stitching together multiple photos occasionally produces artifacts in the SSP HP images, estimates of canopy openness and global site factor are highly correlated with those of traditional methods (R2> 0.9) and are comparable to under- or over-exposing traditional HP by 1-1.5 stops. In addition to superior image quality, SSP HP requires no additional equipment or exposure settings and is likely to prove more robust to uneven lighting conditions by avoiding wide-angles lenses and exploiting HDR images.


2021 ◽  
Vol 29 (4) ◽  
pp. 6036
Author(s):  
Muhammad Safdar ◽  
Jon Yngve Hardeberg ◽  
Ming Ronnier Luo

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