This Nonprovisional application claims priority under 35 U.S.C. § 119(a) on Patent Application No. 0315171.9 filed in Great Britain on 28 Jun. 2003, the entire contents of which are hereby incorporated by reference.
The invention relates to multiple view displays. Such displays may be used to display stereoscopically related images in viewing regions so as to form a three-dimensional (3D) autostereoscopic display. Such displays may also be used to display two or more unrelated views to different viewers. Such displays have applications, for example, in consumer and professional photography, 3D television, police identification, medical imaging, scientific visualisation, 3D advertising, 3D displays, dual view applications, interactive entertainment, vehicle displays and displays for passengers in aircraft.
A known type of autostereoscopic 3D display is disclosed in EP 0 833 184 and EP 0 625 861 and an example of a display of this type is illustrated in
U.S. Pat. No. 5,850,269 discloses a display in which the pixels are arranged in a generally horizontal fashion and cooperate with a lenticular screen. This arrangement is intended to improve the colour performance of the viewing windows of the display.
U.S. Pat. No. 4,600,274 discloses a 2D display in which pixels comprising three complementary colours are arranged as a square array with one colour repeated. Individual pixels of the same colour in each group are refreshed independently of each other and receive different image data.
JP 2 000 078 617 discloses a 3D display in which the signal and drain lines of an addressing matrix of a liquid crystal device are arranged so as to improve 3D display quality. This involves reducing the horizontal width of the pixels to allow for increased electronics between the pixels and so that the vertical height of the pixels may be increased. Such an arrangement provides reduced crosstalk between views.
JP 7-28015 discloses a 3D display in which the relative positions of the pixels and their spacing and orientation provides reduced crosstalk between views.
EP0752610 discloses the use of colour pixel “tessellations” for reducing undesirable visual artefacts, particularly colour separation. The embodiments shown in FIGS. 13 to 22 of this document have composite pixel groups comprising RGGB individual colour pixels. Each composite pixel group receives data from two image pixels and the way these data are combined is described in the passage beginning at column 10 line 43 of this document. In particular, the red and blue components from two consecutive pixels of each image are summed and supplied to the red and blue pixels of the composite group. On the other hand, the green data for the consecutive pixels are supplied individually to the two green pixels of the composite group. When the green components of the two consecutive pixels are different, the two green pixels of the composite group receive different data. The use of consecutive pixel green data is for the purpose of providing good image resolution.
According to the invention, there is provided a multiple view display for displaying N views where N is an integer greater than 1, comprising: a display device comprising a plurality of composite pixel groups, each of which comprises pixels of at least three different colours with at least two pixels of the same colour; a parallax generating device cooperating with the display device to define a plurality of viewing regions; and means for supplying the pixels of the same colour of each group with the same image data.
The at least three different colours may comprise three different colours. The three different colours may comprise red, green and blue.
The pixels may be arranged as sets of N columns with each set cooperating with a respective parallax element of the parallax device.
Each group may comprise four pixels with two of the same colour. The groups may be arranged as rows with the pixels of the same colour being the same colour in each row. The pixels of the same colour may be the same colour in all of the rows.
The pixels of each group may be arranged as two pairs of different coloured pixels in a pair of columns separated by (N−1) columns.
The pixels of the same colour may be of smaller area than the other pixels.
Each group of pixels may comprise a pair of triplets of red, green and blue pixels with the triplets in a pair of columns separated by (N−1) columns.
Each group of pixels may comprise a pair of triplets of red, green and blue pixels arranged in a row with adjacent pairs of the pixels of each group being separated by (N−1) columns.
The supplying means may comprise a controller for supplying image data to the display device.
The supplying means may comprise a respective permanent connection between pixels of the same colour of each group.
The supplying means may comprise a switching arrangement for switching between a multiple view mode of operation, in which pixels of the same colour of each group are connected together, and a one-view mode of operation, in which each pixel of the same colour of each group is connected to a pixel of the same colour of a different group in an adjacent column.
The areas of the pixels of each group may be such that each group is colour-balanced to white when the pixels are at maximum intensity.
The views may be stereoscopically related.
The views may be unrelated to each other.
N may be equal to 2.
The display device may be a liquid crystal device.
The parallax device may be a parallax barrier.
It is thus possible to provide a multiple view display in which the angular separation of different views may be made larger or smaller without requiring any change in the thickness of substrates within the display. For example, the angular separation of views may be increased without requiring the use of thin substrates, such as relatively thin glass, which would be difficult to handle during manufacture. In the case of 3D autostereoscopic displays, a closer viewing distance may be obtained whereas, for displays providing unrelated images to different viewers, the angular separation between the viewing regions can be increased.
In applications where greater viewing distances are required, this may also be achieved without requiring different substrate thicknesses.
In some embodiments, it is possible to reduce the colour pixel visibility of the display. In the case of displays of the front parallax barrier type, it is also possible in some embodiments to use high pitch pixels on low resolution display devices so that the barrier structure is less visible.
These improvements may be obtained with display devices such as liquid crystal devices, in which the spatial resolution and the display area size of the device are not changed in comparison with known arrangements.
FIGS. 8 to 10 are diagrams similar to
Like reference numerals refer to like parts throughout the drawings.
The LCD 10 comprises glass substrates 17 and 18 provided on their adjacent surfaces with addressing electrodes and alignment layers (not shown) separated by a layer of liquid crystal material. The electrode arrangement is such as to define an array of pixels and colour filtering (not shown) is provided between the substrates 17 and 18 so as to define red, green and blue colour pixels arranged as composite “white” groups as described hereinafter. The exterior surfaces of the substrates 17 and 18 carry polarisers 19 and 20 and viewing-angle films 21 and 22.
The parallax barrier 12 is formed on a further substrate 23 carrying a layer 24 which defines parallel evenly spaced vertical slits such as 25 separated by opaque regions. The horizontal pitch of the slits 25 is close to but less than the horizontal pitch of the pixels such as 26 and 27 so as to provide viewpoint correction such that all of the pixels, such as 26, displaying the left view across the LCD 10 are visible in the left viewing window 15 and all of the pixels, such as 27, across the LCD 10 displaying the right view are visible in the right viewing window 16. Viewpoint correction is known and will not be described further.
The controller 11 may comprise any suitable arrangement for supplying image data to the individual pixels. The controller may, for example, receive multiple view image data and may arrange this for supply to the LCD 10 in the appropriate order to ensure that all of the pixels display the correct pixel image data. The controller 11 may generate the image data or may process image data supplied from elsewhere. The image data may represent real images or artificial images, for example generated by a computer.
Although a parallax optic in the form of the parallax barrier 12 is illustrated in
The pixels of the LCD 10 are arranged as composite white pixel groups such that the area of the composite group is balanced in colour to be white when the individual pixels are fully transmitting and only one colour data value is required for and supplied to the or each set of pixels of the group of the same colour.
Barrier visibility is the spatial resolution of the barrier slits as seen by one eye of an observer. Colour visibility is the spatial resolution as seen by one eye of the columns of the white composite pixel groups. It is desirable for barrier and colour visibilities to be low (by having relatively high spatial frequencies) in order to provide good quality image display.
For an autostereoscopic 3D display or a multiple (unrelated) view display of the type shown in
For a 3D display, there is typically an “ideal” viewing distance and thus a corresponding ideal view angle separation. Resolution and size requirements generally restrict the choice of the pixel pitch p and the refractive index n of the glass substrates is not generally considered to be variable for practical reasons. Thus, in order to vary the view angle separation so as to achieve the ideal value, the separation s would have to be varied. If a relatively small viewing distance is required, then a relatively large view angle separation would be needed and this could only be achieved by using relatively thin glass for the substrate 18. However, such thin glass is difficult to handle during manufacture and is generally undesirable.
In the case of multiple view displays, such as dual view displays, displaying unrelated or independent images to two or more different viewers, it is generally desirable for the view angle separation to be substantially bigger than that required for 3D displays. Again, if this is achieved by using a relatively thin substrate 18, problems occur because of the need to handle relatively thin glass during manufacture.
In other cases, some large relatively thin displays, for example in lap top computers, may have limitations to the maximum glass thickness. In such cases, it may be difficult to achieve a sufficiently large viewing distance because of the constraint on maximum glass thickness.
The composite pixel groups are arranged in rows and columns as illustrated at 44, with the arrangement 34 of
The composite groups 30 and 40 shown in
In
In the single view or 2D mode of operation as illustrated at 56 in
It is possible for the duplicated pixels in each composite group to be individually addressed so that the same data may be supplied to the appropriate pairs of pixels in the multiple view and single view modes merely by ensuring that the controller 11 duplicates the image data to the appropriate pixels. Alternatively, the appropriate interconnections may be provided within the addressing arrangement of the LCD 10.
The enable lines 84 and 85 are controlled such that only one line at a time is enabled so as to select between 2D (single view) and 3D (multiple view) modes of operation. When the 3D enable line 85 is enabled, the transistors 81 and 82 are switched on whereas the transistors 80 and 83 are switched off. The green pixels 61 and 63 are connected together and the green pixels 62 and 64 are connected together so that the LCD operates in the same way as described hereinbefore for the embodiment of
In the single view or 2D mode of operation, the pixels 91a, 92a, 93a, 91c, 92c and 93c are connected to the pixels 91b, 92b, 93b, 91d, 92d and 93d, respectively, to form the composite groups such as 90. In the multiple view or 3D mode of operation, the pixels 91a, 92a, 93a, 91b, 92b and 93b are connected to the pixels 91c, 92c, 93c, 91d, 92d and 93d, respectively so that the pixel triplets in alternate rows form the composite pixel groups in this mode of operation.
The appearances of the display for one eye of a viewer are shown for the known arrangement at 94 and for the pixel groups 90 at 95. For the known arrangement, the effective colour pixel pitch 96 is equal to twice the composite white pixel group pitch whereas, for the groups 90, the colour pixel pitch 97 is equal to one group pitch and so is half of that for the known arrangement. The colour visibility is therefore reduced and is the same as the barrier visibility for the embodiment illustrated in
In the single view or 2D mode of operation, the pixels 101a, 102a, 103a, 101c, 102c, 103c are connected to and receive the same image data as the pixels 101b, 102b, 103b, 101d, 102d, 103d, respectively. In the multiple view or 3D mode of operation, the pixels 101a, 102a, 103a, 101b, 102b, 103b are connected to the pixels 101c, 102c, 103c, 101d, 102d, 103d, respectively. Thus, in the multiple view or 3D mode, the pixels 101a, 103a, 102b, 101c, 103c and 102d form a composite white pixel group.
The embodiment shown in
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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0315171.9 | Jun 2003 | GB | national |