The present invention relates to a method and a display, wherein backlight is generated depending on contents of displayed images.
LCD (Liquid Crystal Display) panels suffer from motion blur due to their sample-and-hold nature, i.e. the LC (Liquid Crystal) remains in the same state after addressing during a whole frame. When displayed objects move, as is the case in e.g. TV images, this causes a blurred image of the objects on the retina of a viewer. In US 2004/0012551 A, it is disclosed a means to drive the data for the value corresponding to a present frame display data. By comparing with previous frame of display data, the display data in the present frame that have changes are then over emphasized and written into the LCD driver with more than the amount of change to the picture element data. Further, a backlight control means to control the lighting delay time, the lighting time width, the lighting time interval and the number of times of lighting within one frame of a LCD backlighting is disclosed. However, there is a need for improved backlight control to avoid a flickering image.
It is therefore an object of the present invention to provide an improved method for displaying images on a display, and an improved display.
The above object is achieved according to a first aspect of the present invention by a method for displaying images on a display having backlight, wherein the images are updated periodically with a period. The method comprises the steps of: generating a signal with a pulse pattern for each period depending on contents of an image to be displayed in that period; and activating the backlight in accordance with said signal.
An advantage of this is that the backlighting is depending on the contents of the displayed images for providing an image that is experienced as less flickering.
The backlight may comprise a plurality of lighting units and each lighting unit is associated with a part of the display, wherein the steps of generating a signal and activating backlight are separately adapted to each of the parts.
An advantage of this is that an image comprising contents with very different contents in different parts is improved in each part.
The pulse pattern may comprise a plurality of pulses for each period when contents of the displayed image comprise relatively high brightness.
An advantage of this is that a viewer often experiences a bright image as more flickering, but this is compensated for by increasing the backlighting frequency for such images.
The term “relatively high brightness” should in this context be construed to be a brightness essentially higher than an average brightness of an average image.
The plurality of pulses may be symmetrical during said period when contents of displayed images comprise low changes between subsequent images.
An advantage of this is optimal reduced flickering when an image is relatively static, i.e. when a viewer would experience flickering the most, and the equal distribution would not introduce any blurring.
The plurality of pulses may be asymmetrical during said period when contents of displayed images comprise high changes between subsequent images.
An advantage of this is reduced flickering, and counteracting blurring by distributing the pulses asymmetrically when there is a lot of motion in the image.
The pulse pattern may comprise one pulse for each period when contents of displayed images comprise high changes between subsequent images and relatively low brightness.
The term “relatively low brightness” should in this context be construed to be a brightness essentially lower than an average brightness of an average image.
An advantage of this is optimized counteracting of blurring, while there is little or no experienced flickering due to low brightness.
By symmetrical pulses, it is meant that the pulse in each half of the frame period is symmetrical in effective brightness and position, and for higher multiples of frequency, for each corresponding fraction of frame period. By asymmetrical pulses, it is meant that the pulse in each half of the frame period is symmetric in effective brightness and/or position, and for higher multiples of frequency, for each corresponding fraction of frame period. Effective brightness depend on pulse amplitude and/or width.
Where contents change, the method may further comprise the steps of: generating said signal with a first pattern; generating said signal with intermediate patterns; and generating said signal with a second pattern, wherein said intermediate patterns are such that an average value of said signal is kept constant upon a transition from said first pattern to said second pattern.
An advantage of this is a seamless transition from one backlighting pattern to another, without any brightness dips or peaks. This is particularly advantageous when transition from one backlighting pattern to another is performed within a single image, i.e. from one part to another.
Where the first pattern is a single pulse for each period, and the second pattern is two symmetrical pulses, the intermediate patterns may be two pulses with different effective pulse brightnesses. Where the first pattern is two symmetrical pulses, and the second pattern is a single pulse for each period, the intermediate patterns may be two pulses with different effective pulse brightnesses. An aggregated effective pulse brightness of said pulses within each period may be constant.
An advantage of this is an efficient way to seamlessly transition from one backlighting scheme to another.
The above object is achieved according to a second aspect of the present invention by a display comprising a display panel and a backlight unit, wherein the backlight unit comprises a controller and a lighting device, wherein the controller is arranged to generate a control signal, and the lighting device is arranged to provide backlight to the display panel according to the control signal, wherein the control signal comprises a pulse pattern depending on contents of displayed images.
The backlight unit may comprise a plurality of lighting devices, and each lighting device is associated with a part of the display, and the control signal is separately adapted to each of the parts.
The advantages of the second aspect of the present invention are essentially the same as those of the first aspect.
The above, as well as additional objects, features and advantages of the present invention, will be better understood through the following illustrative and non-limiting detailed description of preferred embodiments of the present invention, with reference to the appended drawings, wherein:
An effective way to reduce large area flicker and achieving motion blur reduction would be to drive the panel at a higher refresh rate and use motion-compensated video up-conversion to achieve a higher video rate with smooth motion. For an LCD it is however not possible to increase refresh rate above 75-80 Hz. Moreover, it is very expensive to up-convert video signals with motion compensation. The present invention provides a less expensive way to achieve less flicker and less motion blurring.
To achieve this, the backlight is operated at double refresh frequency, or a higher multiple. This introduces a higher frequency brightness modulation, which is far above the flicker threshold, even for a white image.
To provide a clearer view in examples provided below,
The operation will be described with an example using double pulses in a display refresh period, i.e. double frequency, but the same principle applies for three or more pulses in a period, i.e. higher multiples of frequency.
For a perfect flicker reduction, these two pulses need to be spaced exactly half a frame distance apart and to have the exactly the same brightness, i.e. symmetrical pulses as illustrated in
The lamps are preferably operated at a fixed current. Therefore, the backlight brightness modulation is preferably done using pulse width modulation. The pulses can also comprise a series of even higher frequency pulses, i.e. the modulation can be done by pulse number modulation of pulse trains. Further, the amplitude of the pulses can be modulated, and a combination of the above mentioned backlight modulation techniques can be applied.
Flicker is most visible in bright scenes with little or no motion, although flicker also is visible in bright scenes with a lot of motion, but in the latter case, motion blur problems increase. For example, when a bright scene with some or a lot of motion is paused, flicker becomes more visible, but motion blur problems, of course, disappear. Therefore, the backlight is operated in double pulse mode, with the two pulses in the frame exactly spaced at half a frame distance, and with exactly the same brightness for the two pulses, when the flicker problem is the most apparent.
When there is some or a lot of motion in the scene, it is only needed to introduce a bit of higher frequency content in the brightness modulation. Therefore, backlight is operated with two pulses spaced at half a frame distance, but with different brightness of the pulses. A first pulse, half a frame period earlier than the second pulse takes care of reducing the flicker to a large extent, while it is sufficiently low in brightness not to cause a clear double image or to cause blur. The second pulse gives the main brightness.
Alternatively, two pulses of same brightness can be moved closer together, as illustrated in
By asymmetrically distributed pulses, it is meant that the pulse in each half of the frame period is asymmetric in effective brightness and position, and for higher multiples of frequency, for each corresponding fraction of frame period.
It is observed that for a total duty cycle of 40%, the flicker of a 25% to 75% pulse ratio is the same as of two pulses of 20% duty cycle each separated by approximately 2/7 of a frame period, center to center. It is also observed that moving image quality is very similar for these two cases for both natural scenes and edge quality.
When there is little or no motion and the scene is not too bright, it is preferable to use the asymmetrical pulse distribution. However, in this case it is not critical and the backlight mode can be chosen arbitrarily, preferably in a way to avoid mode change.
When there is a lot of motion and the scene is not too bright, no flicker reduction is needed, and a single or quasi-single pulse backlight operation can be used to achieve best performance for scenes with a lot of motion.
To illustrate this, the operation will be described for double pulse as in the example above in relation to
A first transition 210 is performed to a first intermediate mode 206. This mode can be a double pulse mode with asymmetrical pulses, e.g. a pulse width ratio of 5% to 95%, and only a small distance between the pulses, i.e. a double pulse pattern that is relatively similar to the single pulse pattern. A second transition 212 is then performed to a second intermediate mode (not shown) with two pulses with less asymmetry, and then further transitions to intermediate modes with more and more symmetry to a transition 214 to a last intermediate mode 208 where the pulse width ratio between the pulses is almost 50% to 50% and the distance between the pulses is almost a half frame distance, center to center. A last transition 216 is performed is performed to the symmetrical double pulse mode 202, where the pulse width ratio is exactly 50% to 50%, and the distance between the pulses is exactly a half frame distance, center to center. The transition between the modes 200, 202 is then complete, and performed such that a viewer do not experience any dips or peaks in brightness. The transitions 210, 212, 214, 216 can be performed between each frame, or between each couple of frames.
Alternatively, the transition is performed, as illustrated in
The same applies with transition from symmetrical double pulse mode 202 to single pulse mode 200 via intermediate modes 208, 206 and transitions 218, 220, 222, 224.
This example illustrated transition between single pulse mode and symmetrical double pulse mode. The same principle applies between other modes, e.g. between single pulse mode and asymmetrical double pulse mode, and between symmetrical and asymmetrical double pulse modes. Further, the principle is also applicable to multi pulse modes. The general principle of the transitions is to insert intermediate modes that gradually change the pulse patterns from one mode to another to avoid brightness dips or peaks.
When there is a change of scene, a transition can be made directly from the first mode 200 to the second mode 202 by a direct transition 226, and from the second mode 202 to the first mode 200 by a direct transition 228. A control signal, from e.g. the display controller, would enable the backlight controller to do such direct transitions 226, 228.
In some cases, image contents are segmented, e.g. a cloudy, bright sky at top and at bottom a dark ground, with sharp letters in subtitles. Therefore, in some cases, it is desirable to segment the driving of the backlight accordingly, i.e. by backlight units 2165 associated to the part of the image to be shown on the display 2100. The present invention is also applicable to this. Thus, the backlighting is not only improved for each type of image, the backlighting is also improved for each part of the image associated to backlight units 2105. To be able to implement this, there is a few things to consider.
Analysis of the image is performed for each part of the image, where the part can be defined by a part illuminated by a certain lighting unit, or a part comprising a certain type of image contents.
To avoid unwanted effects at borders between parts of the image, the transition between a pulse pattern in one part to another part is treated similar to the transition between a first and a second backlight pattern described above. If there is a moving object at a border between two parts of the image, the different effects of the different pulse patterns are reduced by crosstalk between the backlighting units associated with the pulse patterns.
It can be noted that driving the backlighting in double pulse modes, or multi pulse modes, will in some cases produce more light than with single pulse, although the same total pulse duration. An explanation to this is that a switch-off time for a backlight unit last longer than a switch-on time. This is the case for some types of backlight units, and the opposite effect can be observed for other types of backlight units. The difference in lighting can, as described above, be prevented by using quasi-single pulse patterns. As an alternative to quasi-single pulse patterns, single pulse patterns, which provides some additional time for reactive components to settle and thus a somewhat sharper image, can be used, but with a compensation factor added to the pulse to equalize to a quasi-single, double, or multi pulse pattern. It is preferable to have a look-up table, with compensation factors for different pulse patterns for the actual light source or sources, from which compensation factors are used to enable seamless transitions between different pulse patterns, especially when used in neighboring partitions of an image.
However, when a seamless transition is to be made between single and dual or multi pulse patterns, the following procedure can be used:
i) If the double or multi pulses are bigger than the shortest possible pulse, they remain on its stationary position;
ii) When the double or multi pulses are supposed to get shorter than the shortest specified pulse that the lighting unit can handle, the double or multi pulses gradually shift towards a main pulse of the pulse pattern, such that the auxiliary pulses of the pulse pattern are closest possible to the main pulse when they are supposed to disappear. The auxiliary pulses keep their minimum duration until they disappear. In this way, even before the auxiliary pulses get switched off, their contribution to blur due to a too early exposure of reactive components to the light gets smaller.
iii) If the conditions change such that single pulse mode is not necessary, the double or multi pulses go back to their stationary positions.
iv) Once the auxiliary pulses are next to the main pulse, they can be switched off, taking account of a compensation factor, as described above, for the light output difference. As for scene shifts, the change can be made instantaneously, i.e. only performing the step iv).
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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04106987.3 | Dec 2004 | EP | regional |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/IB05/54377 | 12/22/2005 | WO | 00 | 6/20/2007 |