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Proceedings ArticleDOI

HDR displays: a validation against reality

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TLDR
This paper presents the results of a psychophysical investigation to validate a novel HDR display which is capable of contrast ratios similar to what is present in the physical world and describes three perceptual studies with the goal of validating the device against real scenes in terms of peripheral vision.
Abstract
In the real world the contrast between bright areas, directly illuminated by the sun, and dark shadows can be of 6 or 7 orders of magnitude. Although such huge contrast ratio is common in the natural world when these luminance levels are to be displayed on a typical monitor, the range is far too large. Bright areas appear overly saturated and shadows are displayed as black. Until recently, the only approach to solve this problem was to compress the luminance component of a high dynamic range (HDR) scene. Such techniques are known as tone mapping. However, even tone mapping operators are not always capable of producing sufficient contrast reduction. In this paper we present the results of a psychophysical investigation to validate a novel HDR display which is capable of contrast ratios similar to what is present in the physical world. Images displayed on this device are an accurate representation of a window on a scene and may not be equivalent as standing in the real scene due to a lack of peripheral information. We describe three perceptual studies with the goal of validating the device against real scenes in terms of peripheral vision.

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Book

High Dynamic Range Imaging: Acquisition, Display, and Image-Based Lighting (The Morgan Kaufmann Series in Computer Graphics)

TL;DR: This landmark book is the first to describe HDRI technology in its entirety and covers a wide-range of topics, from capture devices to tone reproduction and image-based lighting, leading to an unparalleled visual experience.
Journal ArticleDOI

Evaluation of tone mapping operators using a High Dynamic Range display

TL;DR: A series of psychophysical experiments are presented to validate six frequently used tone mapping operators against linearly mapped High Dynamic Range (HDR) scenes displayed on a novel HDR device and to determine the participants' impressions of the images produced compared to what is visible on a high contrast ratio display.
Journal ArticleDOI

Evaluating HDR rendering algorithms

TL;DR: The purpose of this research was not simply to find out the “best” algorithms, but rather to find a more general psychophysical experiment based methodology to evaluate HDR image-rendering algorithms.
Journal ArticleDOI

Photometric image processing for high dynamic range displays

TL;DR: This work presents several methods of reproducing photometrically accurate images on this new class of devices, and evaluates these methods in a perceptual framework.
Journal ArticleDOI

Color Lens: Adaptive Color Scale Optimization for Visual Exploration

TL;DR: This work proposes a new interaction technique that overcomes limitations by dynamically optimizing color scales based on a set of sampling lenses by inspecting the lens contents in data space, optimizes the initial color scale, and then renders the contents of the lens to the screen using the modified color scale.
References
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Book

Handbook of perception and human performance

TL;DR: This handbook covers theory and methods; basic visual processes; auditory, kinesthetic, cutaneous, and vestibular senses; and space and motion perception; and human performance.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

Recovering high dynamic range radiance maps from photographs

TL;DR: This work discusses how this work is applicable in many areas of computer graphics involving digitized photographs, including image-based modeling, image compositing, and image processing, and demonstrates a few applications of having high dynamic range radiance maps.
Journal ArticleDOI

Fast bilateral filtering for the display of high-dynamic-range images

TL;DR: A new technique for the display of high-dynamic-range images, which reduces the contrast while preserving detail, is presented, based on a two-scale decomposition of the image into a base layer.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

Fast bilateral filtering for the display of high-dynamic-range images

TL;DR: A new technique for the display of high-dynamic-range images, which reduces the contrast while preserving detail, is presented, based on a two-scale decomposition of the image into a base layer, encoding large-scale variations, and a detail layer.
Journal ArticleDOI

Adaptive Logarithmic Mapping For Displaying High Contrast Scenes

TL;DR: A fast, high quality tone mapping technique to display high contrast images on devices with limited dynamic range of luminance values and taking into account user preference concerning brightness, contrast compression, and detail reproduction is proposed.
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