The invention relates to a conversion of an input image signal into a drive signal for driving sub-pixels of a display device, a conversion unit for converting an input image signal into a drive signal for driving sub-pixels of a display device, and a related computer program product.
The invention is for example useful in large matrix displays like for example LCD displays and in mobile displays used in mobile phones, personal digital assistants, personal media players, digital still cameras and digital camcorders.
Increasing the pixel resolution of small RGB displays causes a severe loss in aperture and consequently brightness. The implementation of a multi-primary sub-pixel layout of the pixels of the display together with sub-pixel rendering allows the use of larger sub-pixels and increased transmission through the color filters, and hence an increased brightness without much influence on the perceived resolution. A reduction of the pixel resolution by using a multi-primary display and application of sub-pixel rendering enables to use less drivers.
For full color reproduction, a multi-primary display is a display with more than the three standard primaries, which usually are red R, green G, and blue B. An example of a multi-primary display is an RGBW display of which the pixels comprise R, G, B and white W sub-pixels. In such an RGBW display, the transmission of light through the pixel is greatly increased because no color filter is required for the W sub-pixel. However, the gamut is reduced because this W sub-pixel can not be activated for high brightness saturated colors. A second advantage is the increased resolution through sub-pixel rendering.
Some examples of known sub-pixel configurations of RGBW displays are the quad pixel configuration, the pentile configuration and the vertical stripe configuration. Examples of other existing multi-primary displays are RGBY displays wherein one of the sub-pixels is yellow Y, or RGBCY displays in which the pixels comprise additional cyan C and yellow Y sub-pixels.
The basic reason why sub-pixel rendering increases the resolution is that each sub-pixel is able to convey luminance information at a higher resolution than the full pixel. The effectiveness of sub-pixel rendering for a particular sub-pixel configuration is strongly influenced by how many luminance points can be assigned to each pixel, and how strong these luminance points are. With strong is meant the maximum luminance reachable and having a more similar color. In an RGBW display the two luminance points W and RGB are very strong, both the first group of sub-pixels which comprises the W sub-pixel and the second group of sub-pixels which comprises the R, G, and B sub-pixels are able to produce the same white light with a high intensity. Further, the luminance of the W sub-pixel may be very high.
A state of the art video chain for sub-pixel rendering may comprise a scaling unit, a pre-filter, a multi-primary conversion and a sub-pixel mapping. The scaling unit receives an RGB image with arbitrary resolution and supplies an RGB image at full resolution matching the luminance points resolution of the display. Or said differently, in the full resolution RGB image an RGB sample exists for each sub-pixel of the display. The image may be a still image or video, and may comprise synthetic and/or natural information. The synthetic information may be computer generated information such as, for example, text and/or graphs. The natural information may be, for example, a photograph or film. Preferably, the input image has image detail that corresponds to what can be represented by the luminance points of the display. The pre-filter filters the RGB full resolution image to remove (chroma) detail which cannot be represented by the sub-pixel rendering without visible artifacts. Thus, detail is lost, but color and luminance are maintained. The multi-primary converter converts the filtered RGB signal into a full resolution RGBW signal. Or, more general, converts the three primary input signal into the multi-primary signals associated with the more than three sub-pixels per pixel of the display. The sub-pixel mapper generates the drive values for the sub-pixels by selecting them from the full resolution RGBW signal depending on the primary dictated by the sub-pixel pattern for the location of the sub-pixel. However, such existing sub-pixel rendering algorithm has the drawback that the readability of text, and the representation of fine details and datagraphic images is poor.
It is an object of the invention to improve the readability of text, or the representation of fine details or of datagraphic images.
A first aspect of the invention provides a conversion as claimed in claim 1. A second aspect of the invention provides a conversion unit as claimed in claim 11. A third aspect of the invention provides a computer program product as claimed in claim 12. Advantageous embodiments are defined in the dependent claims.
A conversion in accordance with the first aspect of the invention converts an input image signal into an output signal for driving sub-pixels of a display device. As generally known, a multi-primary conversion converts the input signal defined by M input primaries into the output signal defined by N>M display primaries. Both M and N are positive integers. Usually, the N display primaries are associated with N sub-pixels which convey differently colored light. The sub-pixels may generate the light or may transmit or reflect the light. The display device comprises display pixels which have at least two sub-pixel groups able to substantially contribute to luminance information displayed. In the example of an RGBW display the two groups may be the RGB sub-pixels or primaries and the W sub-pixel or primary. Alternatively the two groups may be the G sub-pixels and the W sub-pixels.
The multi-primary conversion is performed under a constraint that the local display luminances associated with the at least two sub-pixel groups substantially corresponds to the corresponding local input luminances of input pixels. The result is that a display luminance pattern defined by the display pixels substantially matches an input luminance pattern defined by the corresponding input pixels. Consequently, luminance gradients in the original image are, as much as possible, reproduced on the display. The “as much as possible” indicates that it depends on the actual gradient (luminance and chrominance) in the input image whether it is possible to exactly reproduce this gradient in the output image. For example clipping may occur dependent on the luminance and chrominance of the input pixels of the input image.
It has to be noted that in the prior art sub-pixel rendering, the multi-primary conversion may be performed under a constraint such as an equal luminance constraint, but none of the prior art sub-pixel algorithms discloses the luminance gradient constraint.
In an embodiment, the constraint is determined by computing a first input luminance for input pixels associated with a first display area comprising the first sub-pixel group and the second sub-pixel group of the at least two sub-pixel groups. A second input luminance is computed for input pixels associated with a second display area comprising the first sub-pixel group and being a sub-area of the first display area. The constraint is determined to obtain a substantially matching ratio or difference between on the one hand the first input luminance and a the second input luminance and on the other hand a first display luminance which is the luminance of the sub-pixels covered by the first display area and a second display luminance which is the luminance of the sub-pixels covered by the second display area.
In an embodiment the first display area covers sub-pixels of all types to allow reproduction of any desired color. Thus, for example, in an RGBW display, the first area covers R, G, B and W sub-pixels. The second display area covers sub-pixel(s) allowing reproduction of any desired luminance but not any desired color. For example in an RGBW display, the second area covers the W sub-pixel or the RGB sub-pixels, or the G sub-pixel. It has to be noted that the second display area lies within the first display area. In this approach, the different luminance points of the multi-primary display are optimally used to reproduce the luminance gradients and resolution in the input image.
In an embodiment, the first input luminance is computed by using a first filtering operation with a first filter kernel which at least covers the first display area. Filter coefficients of the first filtering operation are proportional to areas of the sub-pixels which are covered by the first filter kernel. The second input luminance is computed by using a second filtering operation with a second filter kernel which covers the second display area. Filter coefficients of the second filtering operation are proportional to areas of the sub-pixels which are covered by the second filter kernel. The use of these filters, which take notice of the areas of sub-pixels covered, improves the correctness of the determination of the input luminances for the associated display areas. Consequently, the matching of the display intensity with the input intensity will be improved. Alternatively, the filter kernel may cover larger areas than the first and the second display area and thereby even partly overlap each other. The coefficients need not be exactly proportional to the areas of the sub-pixels covered.
In an embodiment, the computing of the first input luminance and the second luminance uses a filtering operation with a filter kernel covering the first display area minus the second display area. Filter coefficients of the filtering are proportional to areas of the sub-pixels being covered. This approach has the advantage that a single filter only is required.
In an embodiment, the determining of the constraint adds an equation to the multi-primary conversion defining the ratio or difference between the first display luminance and the second display luminance such that the ratio or difference, respectively, of the first input luminance and the second input luminance are matched. The addition of the equation to the multi-primary conversion is a simple method to perform the multi-primary conversion under the luminance gradient constraint.
In an embodiment, the conversion further comprising a sub-pixel distribution which determines local input luminances associated with sub-pixels covered by a region including and surrounding a particular one of the sub-pixels having a particular color. For example, in an RGBW display, the region may cover the W sub-pixel and parts of the surrounding RGB sub-pixels. Now, the local input luminances are the luminance of the W sub-pixel and the luminances of the covered parts of the RGB sub-pixels. The output image signal of the multi-primary conversion is for each sub-pixel distributed over the sub-pixels of the region to obtain a distributed image signal. The distribution is performed in accordance with the local input luminances associated with the sub-pixels covered by the region to obtain a luminance distribution across the sub-pixels which as much as possible matches the luminance distribution of the local input luminances. The distributed image signal is accumulated per sub-pixel for all sub-pixels in the region. Thus, now the local input luminances steer both the multi-primary conversion and the distribution of the output values of the multi-primary conversion over the sub-pixels to obtain an optimum correspondence between the luminance distribution on the display and the luminance distribution in the input image.
In an embodiment, the region is a display area comprising a first sub-pixel group and a second sub-pixel group of the at least two sub-pixel groups. Thus, the sub-pixel distribution may use the same local input luminances as required for determining the constraint for the multi-primary conversion.
In an embodiment, the determining of the local input luminances comprises computing a total luminance per particular color in the region by using a filtering operation with a filter kernel covering the region. Filter coefficients of the filtering are proportional to areas of the sub-pixels being covered by the filter kernel for the sub-pixels which have the particular color. Luminance contributions are determined for each one of the sub-pixels which are covered by the region and have the particular color by multiplying the total luminance with the relative area of a particular one of these sub-pixels in the region, and with the local input luminance of this particular one of the sub-pixels in the input image.
These and other aspects of the invention are apparent from and will be elucidated with reference to the embodiments described hereinafter.
In the drawings:
It should be noted that items which have the same reference numbers in different Figures, have the same structural features and the same functions, or are the same signals. Where the function and/or structure of such an item has been explained, there is no necessity for repeated explanation thereof in the detailed description.
The converter receives an input image signal IS which per input pixel is defined by N values defining the contribution of the N input primaries. Usually, the input signal is an RGB signal defined with respect to the three primaries R (red), G (green) and B (blue). Any other representation of the input signal, such as for example YUV can be converted into an RGB signal. Usually these RGB primaries are the EBU primaries. However, any other signal defined with respect to another number N of other primaries could also be processed.
The converter supplies M drive signals DS to the display device DD to drive the M sub-pixels SP of the display pixels DPI of the display device DD. In the example shown in
The converter comprises a multi-primary converter MPC which converts the input image signal IS defined with respect to the N input primaries into an output signal OS defined with respect to the display primaries. A sub-pixel distributor SPD distributes (or allocates) the output signal OS to the sub-pixels SP in the spatial surrounding of the output signal pixel being processed. For example, for an RGBW display, the input pixels which are defined by three values for the three input primaries RGB are converted into four drive values DS for the four sub-pixels SP. The multi-primary converter MPC receives a constraint CO which is generated by a constraint defining unit CD. The constraint defining unit CD uses area information A1, A2 or AD (see
The sub-pixel distribution SPD may also use the input luminance distribution of the input pixels to steer the allocation of the output image signal OS of the multi-primary converter MPC to the drive values DS and thus the sub-pixels SP. This steered sub-pixel distribution SPD is described with respect to
The area or region A2 is selected to cover sufficient sub-pixels SP to obtain any desired luminance. In the example shown, the area A2 covers at least a portion of the RGB sub-pixels. If the W sub-pixel is selected as the central pixel, the area A2 may be selected to cover (a portion) of the W sub-pixel. Preferably, the area A2 is selected such that it is strongly related to a single luminance point of the display pixel DPI. In the RGBW display, two luminance points exist which convey high luminance information: the W sub-pixel and the RGB group of sub-pixels. Alternatively, the G sub-pixel alone may also be considered to be a high luminance point, however this luminance point has a color green which deviates from the color white of the other high luminance point. In an embodiment, strongly related, means that the area A2 covers as much as possible of a single high luminance point and as little as possible of the other luminance point(s). The area A1 is selected to cover all types of sub-pixels SP (or at least portions thereof) to obtain any desired color. Thus, the area A1 covers sufficient sub-pixels (or portions thereof) such that two high luminance points are covered. Preferably, the area A1 covers not more sub-pixels than required to cover a single combination of the two luminance points. One of the two luminance points within the area A1 is also within the area A2. Or said differently, the area A2 lies within the area A1. Although in the example shown the two areas A1 and A2 have a circular circumference any other suitable shape of the two areas A1, A2 may be selected.
The areas A1 and A2 are selected to be able to steer the multi-primary conversion MPC such that the luminances DL1, DL2 of the sub-pixels SP of the areas A1 and A2 in the output sub-pixel grid SPG, respectively, correspond as much as possible to the luminances L1 and L2 of the areas A1 and A2 in the input pixel grid IPG. Alternatively, instead of matching the two luminances L1 and L2, the luminance DLD in the output sub-pixel grid SPG of the area A2-A1, which is the area in the output sub-pixel grid SPG between the largest and the smallest circle, can be matched with the luminance LD of the corresponding area AD in the input pixel grid IPG. The areas A1 and A2 are shown to have the same dimensions in both the output sub-pixel grid SPG and the input pixel grid IPG because the input pixel grid IPG is scaled to fit the output sub-pixel grid SPG.
In an embodiment, the larger area A1 is selected with respect to the smaller area A2 to obtain a difference area AD or A1-A2 which covers the neighboring sub-pixels required to generate another luminance point than the luminance point related to the area A2. However, dependent on the sub-pixel pattern, the area A1 may comprise further sub-pixels or sub-pixel portions contributing to the luminance point covered by the area A2. In fact the difference in area between the areas A1 and A2 defines the area over which the luminance distributions created by the sub-pixels corresponds to the luminance distributions of the associated input pixels. With a small difference area less averaging occurs and high frequent spatial luminance distributions (or high luminance gradients) can be reproduced but only very locally. This very local approach may give rise to discontinuity artifacts for neighboring areas of the displayed image on the output sub-pixel grid SPG. With a relatively large difference area, discontinuity artifacts will be less but due to averaging of the luminance, luminance resolution will be lost.
The example shown in
YW=YW1+¼(YR1+YR2)+¼(YB1+YB2)
YG=¼(YG1+YG2+YG3+YG4)+¼(YR1+YR2)+¼(YB1+YB2)
It has to be noted that these contribution matrices, and the way they are used, are actually filter kernels which operate on the luminance input image. As shown, the filter kernels depend on the central sub-pixel. The kernels may take a wider region into account, or may add sharpening. The difference signal when the central sub-pixel is the white sub-pixel W1 is defined by:
ΔY=YW−YG=YW−¼(YG1+YG2+YG3+YG4)
This difference signal is used as the constraint in the multi-primary conversion to effectively eliminate one degree of freedom.
The multi-primary conversion obeys the following general matrix equation wherein a color C=(Cx, Cy, Cz) when defined in the XYZ color coordinate system is determined by a linear combination of the drive values (RGBW):
In a practical implementation the normalized RGBW drive values are constrained to lie between 0.0 (full off) and 1.0 (full on). For example, in an analog implementation, these border values are usually related to the power supply voltages used, and in an digital implementation this range is the normalized range of digital words representable by the selected number of bits. In the central matrix, the columns (e.g. Rx Ry Rz) represent the color points of the individual primaries. The row Ry Gy By Wy represents the luminance of each of the display primaries. It has to be noted that this equation is under-determined and allows many solutions for the drive values R G B W that form the same target color C. This degree of freedom in solutions is used to steer the luminance towards green or white. In fact, it is tried to obtain the optimum luminance balance. This is achieved by adding two extra “constraint” rows, directly following from the above equations for YW and YG, to the matrix equation:
These constraint rows effectively force the drive values R G B W such that the desired luminance of the individual luminance point sub-regions YW, YG is achieved. Closer inspection reveals that the constraint rows 4 and 5 sum up to row 2. The above matrix is therefore of rank 4 which means that the matrix can be simplified by subtracting row 5 from row 4 (or the other way around):
This reveals the use of the luminance difference signal ΔY. The central matrix is static (its coefficients do not change), of full rank, and therefore its inverse can be computed and stored in the system. The inverse matrix is defined by:
This inverse matrix is used to compute the optimal combination of drive levels Ro, Go, Bo, Wo:
Similarly, a matrix RGB can be defined given by:
Which performs a similar role as the XYZ matrix but now for input color C=(CR CG CB) defined directly in RGB. The computation for the optimal drive levels then becomes:
The optimal combination of drive values cannot always be realized on the actual display since they must lie in the valid range between 0.0 and 1.0. Usually, values outside the valid range are hard or soft clipped. An example of a circuit that performs a proper multi-primary conversion under a constraint for an optimal choice of drive values is described in WO2006/106457 (ID692833). The block diagram shown in
The display area selector DAS selects, on the sub-pixel grid SPG of the display device DD, the area A1-A2 or areas A1, A2 on which the luminance constraint LC should be applied. The selection may depend on the actual sub-pixel pattern SPP. The display area selector DAS may actually receive input about the sub-pixel pattern SPP such that the area selection is tailored to the actual display. Alternatively, if the sub-pixel pattern SPP is well known, the areas A1, A2 selected may be pre-stored. The luminance constraint LC has to be related to the different sub-pixels groups which comprise differently colored sub-pixels having a contribution to the luminance. For example, in a RGBW display, the sub-pixels form a red, green, blue and white primary. The first group may comprise the white sub-pixel, the second group may comprise the green sub-pixel or the green, red and blue sub-pixels. It has to be noted that a selected sub-pixel group may comprise a single sub-pixel only.
The input luminance determining unit ILD determines the input luminance DL (see
To determine the luminances L1 and L2, the input luminance determining unit ILD may comprise two filters FI1 and FI2 which filter the input pixels of the input image signal IS using the areas A1 and A2 as the filter kernels, respectively, and coefficients FC which depend on the relative area of portions of sub-pixels covered by the areas A1 and A2, respectively. A single filter FI (see
Because a three to four multi-primary conversion MPC has a single freedom, one constraint CO can be applied. This single constraint CO may be defined as the ratio or as the difference between the two input luminances L1 and L2 of the two areas, or as a single luminance DL of a delta area A1-A2 of the two areas A1 and A2. The second area A2 may be selected to cover the first sub-pixel group SG1, the first area A1 may be selected to cover both the first sub-pixel group SG1 and the second sub-pixel group SG2. For example, in the RGBW display, the first sub-pixel group SG1 may comprise the white sub-pixel W, and the second area A2 comprises the white sub-pixel W and its immediate surrounding. This immediate surrounding may comprise the complete or part of the surrounding RGB sub-pixels. If part of a surrounding sub-pixel is covered, its contribution to the second luminance L2 defined in the input image is proportional to this part as may be defined by the filter coefficients FC.
The first area A1 comprises the second area A2 and its immediate surrounding sub-pixels. Again if an immediate surrounding sub-pixel is covered partly only, the contribution to the first luminance L1 defined in the input image is proportional to this part. Preferably, the second area A2, which may be called the centre area, is selected to cover sufficient sub-pixels to make any desired luminance, and the first area A1, which may be called the whole area, is selected to cover sub-pixels of all types to make any desired color. Or said differently, the second area A2 covers substantially a single luminance point, while the first area A1 covers this single luminance point and another (or parts of other) luminance point. Now, the luminances L1 and L2 in the input image corresponding to the two areas A1 and A2, respectively, are determined, and the multi-primary conversion MPC is steered such that the luminances DL1 and DL2 on the display in the two areas A1 and A2 match the luminances L1 and L2 in the input image in the two areas A1 and A2. Of course, instead of matching these two luminances L1 and L2, the luminance DL of the difference area A1-A2 may be matched.
It has to be noted that for a three to more than four primary multi-primary conversion MPC, more constraints CO may be added to obtain a deterministic solution. For example, in a display with five primaries, three luminance points per display pixel DPI can be defined, and two constraints CO can be defined to cancel the two degrees of freedom of the three to five multi-primary conversion MPC. Alternatively, only a subset of the degrees of freedom may be cancelled by using only a subset of the luminance constraints CO. Now, the remaining degrees of freedom may be left or may be used for another constraint.
The multi-primary conversion MPC comprises a matrix calculation unit MC which calculates the matrix Mxyz or Mrgb as described earlier by using the coordinates PCO of the display primaries, and the sub-pixel pattern (SPP) of the display (D1) to introduce the constraint CO as two extra equations or one extra equation, respectively (as has been elucidated before). The matrix multiplication unit MM multiplies (determines the inner product of) this matrix Mxyz or Mrgb with the pixel input values CR, CG, CB and the delta luminance to calculate the optimal drive value for the W sub-pixel in accordance with the already introduced equation:
As shown by this equation, also the optimal values Ro, Go, Bo for the red, green, blue sub-pixels could be calculated directly. However,
The min/max circuit MIMA determines the minimum and maximum bounds for valid values of the W drive signal. The min/max circuit MIMA controls the clipping circuit CL1 to clip any normalized negative values of Wo to zero and any normalized positive values larger than 1 to 1. Further, the valid values of Wo depend on the actual values of the Ro, Go, Bo values. The maximum value of Wo cannot be higher than the minimum value of the Ro, Go, Bo values, and the minimum value of Wo may be larger than zero if at least one of the Ro, Go, Bo values is larger than 1. The clipped value of Wo is the output value WOS for the W sub-pixel. The subtract circuits SU1, SU2 and SU3 subtract the clipped value WOS from the input values CR, CG and CB, respectively. The resulting difference signals are clipped in the clipping circuit CL2, if required, to supply the output signal OS of the multi-primary conversion of which the components are the output signals ROS, GOS and BOS for the R, G and B sub-pixels respectively.
The same scheme is valid for any other multi-primary system, however the multi-primary converter may become more complex, and an example is described in WO2006/106457.
In general, in accordance with the invention the sub-pixel distributor distributes the output values ROS, GOS, BOS, WOS of the multi-primary conversion MPC over a sub-pixel region SPR surrounding and including the central sub-pixel which has a particular color. Dependent on the color of the central sub-pixel, such a sub-pixel region SPR may be selected, for example, to be the area A1 or A2, as shown in
In general, the distribution uses the rule that if one of the sub-pixels SP has a (relative) low associated luminance, it does not make sense to distribute a high drive value to it. Or said differently, if the input pixel luminance in the input image region IPR of the input pixel grid IPG at a particular position corresponding with the luminance point of the particular sub-pixel SP has a low value, a low drive value should be distributed to this particular sub-pixel SP. The sub-pixel distributor receives from the multi-primary converter MPC the sets of output values ROS, GOS, BOS, WOS for each sub-pixel SP. Further information is required on the sub-pixel pattern SPP of the above mentioned sub-pixel region SPR, which dictates to which primary colors the sub-pixels SP in the region belong, and on the desired luminance values in the input image region IPR surrounding the sub-pixel SP in question.
First, the circuit shown in
The distributor DIS distributes the RGBW output values ROS, GOS, BOS, WOS supplied by the multi-primary converter MPC into the distributed signal D1 which is accumulated by the accumulating circuit ACC to obtain the drive signal DS. The drive signal DS has the components RDS, GDS, BDS and WDS for the RGBW sub-pixels SP, respectively. Each one of the RGBW output values ROS, GOS, BOS, WOS is distributed separately in accordance with distribution coefficients DCO such that the output value of a particular color is distributed over the drive signals DS for the sub-pixels SP of this particular primary color within the sub-pixel region SPR selected. The accumulating circuit ACC accumulates the computed RGBW regions SPR over the entire image. Each output value for a particular sub-pixel SP is partly distributed to the surrounding sub-pixels SP in the sub-pixel region SPR. This implies that each sub-pixel SP receives contributions for its own drive value from its neighbors. These contributions are summed by the accumulator ACC and, if required clipped (not shown) to the valid range to obtain de drive signal DS for this sub-pixel SP.
The total luminance computing circuit CTL computes the total luminance YRT, YGT, YBT, YWT for each one of the primaries R, G, B, W, respectively, by using the luminance distribution in the input pixel region IPR of
The multiplication coefficient determiner MCD determines the multiplication coefficients MCO for each sub-pixel SP which has a particular color as a luminance contribution of the sub-pixel SP in question in comparison to the total luminance of the sub-pixels SP which have the particular color. This ratio of the luminance contribution of the sub-pixel SP in question and the total luminance is defined by (i) the area contribution of the sub-pixel SP in question to the total area of the sub-pixels SP having this color in the selected area A1 or A2, see also
Said in other words, for the distribution of the green G drive value, first the locations of the green sub-pixels G1 to G4 are determined within the sub-pixel region SPR. Secondly, the corresponding desired luminances YG1 to YG4 are retrieved. The drive value GDS for the G sub-pixel is then distributed proportionally to these luminances. To compute the distribution proportion, first the total luminance YT for the green sub-pixels G1 to G4 is computed, and weighted by the contribution coefficients (for example, as already defined for the multi-primary conversion MPC, see
YGT=¼(YG1+YG2+YG3+YG4)
It has to be noted that for this particular embodiment of the RGBW quad layout, all coefficients are equal to ¼. This is, however not the case for other layouts, such as for example the RGBW pentile layout. The weighting can be used to create preference for closer located sub-pixels to further away located sub-pixels. It is advisable to keep the distributed color as close as possible to the central sub-pixel. The weighting can again be seen as a filter kernel, per display primary, which also varies with the central sub-pixel.
The distribution to the green sub-pixels G1 to G4 is then computed according to:
According to this distribution, the entire drive value GOS is completely distributed:
GOS=GDS1+GDS2+GDS3+GDS4
The same process is then followed for the other primary drive values WOS, ROS and BOS.
It has to be noted that the preceding embodiment is a guideline only, and that the distribution should be substantially proportional to the luminance distribution YL. Any comparable scheme could suffice. In the extreme case of, for example, only one of the green sub-pixels (e.g. the G4 sub-pixel with the luminance YG4) has some luminance, and the remainder being completely dark, then all of the drive value GOS is passed on to only that particular green sub-pixel G4. This level of distribution is then most likely to result in clipping for that sub-pixel G4. This can be avoided if constraints are put on the range of the distribution factors
It should be noted that the above-mentioned embodiments illustrate rather than limit the invention, and that those skilled in the art will be able to design many alternative embodiments without departing from the scope of the appended claims.
Although the present invention is elucidated in many embodiments for an RGBW display, a similar approach is valid for other multi-primary displays. Further, the sub-pixel pattern shown are examples only, the present invention is applicable on any sub-pixel pattern which is able to create more than one luminance point.
Although the present invention is elucidated by describing functions of hardware blocks, instead of dedicated hardware a suitably programmed computer may be used to perform the functions. The program code may be available on a computer program product, or may be implemented as a plug-in in a software application.
In the claims, any reference signs placed between parentheses shall not be construed as limiting the claim. Use of the verb “comprise” and its conjugations does not exclude the presence of elements or steps other than those stated in a claim. The article “a” or “an” preceding an element does not exclude the presence of a plurality of such elements. The invention may be implemented by means of hardware comprising several distinct elements, and by means of a suitably programmed computer. In the device claim enumerating several means, several of these means may be embodied by one and the same item of hardware. The mere fact that certain measures are recited in mutually different dependent claims does not indicate that a combination of these measures cannot be used to advantage.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
06122574 | Oct 2006 | EP | regional |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
---|---|---|---|---|
PCT/IB2007/054224 | 10/17/2007 | WO | 00 | 4/14/2009 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
WO2008/047313 | 4/24/2008 | WO | A |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
20050083352 | Higgins | Apr 2005 | A1 |
20090058873 | Brown Elliott et al. | Mar 2009 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country |
---|---|---|
1388818 | Feb 2004 | EP |
02091349 | Nov 2002 | WO |
2006106457 | Oct 2006 | WO |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
20100013848 A1 | Jan 2010 | US |