This application claims the priority benefit of Korean Patent Application No. 10-2013-0072925 filed on Jun. 25, 2013, which is incorporated herein by reference for all purposes as if fully set forth herein.
1. Field of the Invention
Embodiments of the invention relate to a stereoscopic image display and a driving method thereof.
2. Description of the Related Art
Stereoscopic image displays are categorized into a glasses type that requires the use of special glasses and a non-glasses type that does not require use of the special glasses. In the glasses type, a binocular parallax image is displayed on a direct view-based display device or a projector by changing a polarization direction or in a time division manner, and polarization glasses or liquid crystal shutter glasses are used to implement stereoscopic images. In the non-glasses type, generally, an optical plate such as a parallax barrier or the like for separating an optical axis of the binocular parallax image is provided in front of a display screen so that left-eye image light and right-eye image light are separated to implement stereoscopic images.
Glasses-type stereoscopic image displays are categorized into a polarization glasses type and a shutter glasses type. The polarization glasses type requires a polarization separation device, such as a patterned retarder, to be bonded to a display panel. The patterned retarder separates the polarizations of a left-eye image and a right-eye image displayed on the display panel, thereby creating a binocular parallax. As the polarizations of the left-eye image and the right-eye image are separated by the patterned retarder, a viewer wearing polarization glasses can see the left-eye image with the left eye and the right-eye image with the right eye and therefore can perceive a stereoscopic effect due to the binocular parallax. The patterned retarder may be implemented as a glass patterned retarder GPR based on a glass substrate or a film patterned retarder FPR based on a film substrate. In recent years, the film patterned retarder FPR, which can reduce the thickness, weight, price, etc., of the display panel compared to the glass patterned retarder GPR, has come to be more preferred.
If a stereoscopic image display that displays a stereoscopic image by the binocular parallax is unable to completely separate the left-eye image and the right-eye image, the viewer may feel or perceive a crosstalk where the left-eye image and the right-eye image overlap each other when viewing them with a single eye (left eye or right eye). A gray-to-gray (GTG) crosstalk is defined as a mean crosstalk for the gray levels.
On the screen (or pixel array) of the polarization glasses type stereoscopic image display, odd-numbered pixel lines (hereinafter, abbreviated as “odd lines” can display a left-eye image and even-numbered pixel lines (hereinafter, abbreviated as “even lines”) can display a right-eye image. In this polarization glasses type stereoscopic image display, gray-to-gray (GTG) crosstalk may be represented as a mean value of a perceived crosstalk for the gray levels of odd and even lines on the screen. In the polarization glasses type stereoscopic image display, there is as big a difference in gray level between data written to the pixels of odd lines and data written to the pixels of even lines, both of which are connected to the same data line, as the binocular disparity between the left-eye image and the right-eye image. Thus, the polarization glasses type stereoscopic image display is more susceptible to gray-to-gray crosstalk. In other words, the polarization glasses type stereoscopic image display shows a large difference in gray level between data voltages continuously supplied to the pixels of odd lines and the pixels of even lines, respectively, through the same data line.
Embodiments of the invention have been made in an effort to provide a stereoscopic image display which can reduce crosstalk in a stereoscopic image and a driving method thereof.
A stereoscopic image display according to an embodiment of the invention includes: a data driving circuit that supplies a data voltage to data lines of a display panel; a gate driving circuit that supplies a gate pulse to gate lines of the display panel; and a timing controller that controls operation timings of the data driving circuit and gate driving circuit. The gate driving circuit delays a rising timing of the gate pulse to a point in time after a rising edge time of the data voltage in a 3D mode for displaying a 3D image on the display panel, under the control of the timing controller.
A driving method of a stereoscopic image display according to an embodiment of the invention includes: supplying a data voltage to data lines of a display panel; and supplying a gate pulse to gate lines of the display panel. A rising timing of the gate pulse is delayed to a point in time after a rising edge time of the data voltage in a 3D mode for displaying a 3D image on the display panel.
A driving method of a stereoscopic image display according to an embodiment includes supplying a data voltage to data lines of a display panel; and supplying a gate pulse to gate lines of the display panel at different times depending on selection of a 2D mode for displaying a 2D image on the display panel or a 3D mode for displaying a 3D image on the display panel.
The accompanying drawings, which are included to provide a further understanding of the invention and are incorporated in and constitute a part of this specification, illustrate embodiments of the invention and together with the description serve to explain the principles of the invention. In the drawings:
Hereinafter, example embodiments of the invention will be described in detail with reference to the attached drawings. Throughout the specification, the same reference numerals indicate substantially the same components. Further, in the following description, well-known functions or constructions related to the embodiments of the invention will not be described in detail if it appears that they could obscure the embodiments of the invention in unnecessary detail.
The stereoscopic image display of the embodiment of the invention may be implemented based on a liquid crystal display. The liquid crystal display may be implemented in any form including a transmissive liquid crystal display, a transflective liquid crystal display, and a reflective liquid crystal display. The transmissive liquid crystal display and the transflective liquid crystal display require a backlight unit. The backlight unit may be implemented as a direct type backlight unit or an edge type backlight unit.
Referring to
The display panel PNL may be implemented as a display panel of a liquid crystal display (LCD), but is not limited thereto. The display panel PNL comprises a pixel array in which data lines and gate lines cross each other and pixels are arranged in a matrix to display 2D/3D images. The display panel PNL may be implemented as a display panel for a flat panel display, such as a liquid crystal display (LCD) or an organic light emitting diode (OLED) display, that applies a data voltage and a gate pulse (or scan pulse) to the pixels.
On a lower substrate of the display panel PNL of the liquid crystal display (LCD), formed are data lines 106, gate lines 107 crossing the data lines 106, TFTs (thin film transistors; T of
The patterned retarder PR is attached onto the display panel PNL. The patterned retarder PR comprises a first phase delay pattern 300a facing odd-numbered lines in the screen (or pixel array) of the liquid crystal display panel PNL and a second phase delay pattern 300b facing even-numbered lines in the screen (or pixel array). Optical axes of the first phase delay pattern 300a and the second phase delay pattern 300b are orthogonal to each other. The first phase delay pattern 300a and the second phase delay pattern 300b each may be implemented as a birefringent medium that delays the phase of incident light by ¼ wavelength. The pattern retarder PR may be implemented as a film patterned retarder FPR based on a film substrate.
On the display panel PNL, the odd-numbered lines may display a left-eye image, and the even-numbered lines may display a right-eye image. In this instance, light of the right-eye image displayed in the odd-numbered lines of the pixel array passes through the upper polarization plate and enters the first phase delay pattern 300a of the patterned retarder PR. Light of the left-eye image displayed in the even-numbered lines of the pixel array passes through the upper polarization plate and enters the second phase delay pattern 300b. Light of the left-eye image and light of the right-eye image are linearly polarized along the same polarization direction while passing through the upper polarization plate and enter the patterned retarder PR. Linearly polarized light of the left-eye image that enters the first phase delay pattern 300a of the patterned retarder PR through the upper polarization plate is phase-delayed by a phase difference of the first phase delay pattern 300a, passes through the first phase delay pattern 300a, and is then converted into first polarized light. Linearly polarized light of the right-eye image that enters the second phase delay pattern 300b of the patterned retarder PR through the upper polarization plate is phase-delayed by a phase difference of the second phase delay pattern 300b, passes through the second phase delay pattern 300b, and is then converted into second polarized light. The first polarized light and the second polarized light are illustrated as being left circularly polarized light and right circularly polarized light, but the embodiments of the invention are not limited thereto. The polarization characteristics of the first polarized light and the second polarized light may vary depending on the phase delay values and polarization direction of the phase delay patterns 300a and 300b of the patterned retarder PR.
A left-eye polarization filter of the polarization glasses 310 allows only the first polarized light to pass therethrough, and a right-eye polarization filter thereof allows only the second polarized light to pass therethrough. Accordingly, when a viewer wears the polarization glasses 310 in the 3D mode, the viewer sees pixels displaying the left-eye image with the left eye and pixels displaying the right-eye image with the right eye, thereby having a stereoscopic feeling (or perceiving a stereoscopic image) due to a binocular parallax.
The stereoscopic image display of the embodiment of the invention comprises a display panel driving circuit. The display panel driving circuit writes 2D image data in the pixels of the display panel PNL in the 2D mode and writes 3D image (or stereoscopic image) data in the pixels of the display panel PNL in the 3D mode. As shown in
The data driver 102 latches digital video data RGB of 2D/3D images under the control of the timing controller 101. The data driver 102 converts the digital video data RGB into a gamma compensation voltage to generate a data voltage. In the 2D mode, the data driver 102 outputs the data voltage of a 2D image, which is not divided into a left-eye image and a right-eye image, that is, has no binocular parallax. In the 3D mode, the data driver 102 supplies the data voltage of the left-eye image and the data voltage (Vdata of selective
The gate driver 103 sequentially supplies a gate pulse (or scan pulse) to the gate lines 107 under the control of the timing controller 101. The gate pulse (Vgate of selective
The data formatter 105 receives 3D image data input from a host system 104 in the 3D mode, and separates left-eye image data and right-eye image data line by line and transmits them to the timing controller 101. Also, the data formatter 105 converts 2D image data input from a host system 104 in the 3D mode by using a 2D-3D image conversion algorithm, and separates left-eye image data and right-eye image data line by line and transmits them to the timing controller 101. In the 2D mode, the data formatter 105 transmits 2D image data input from the host system 104 as is to the timing controller 101.
Upon receiving timing signals such as a vertical synchronization signal Vsync, a horizontal synchronization signal Hsync, a data enable signal DE, a dot clock CLK, etc., from the host system 104, the timing controller 101 generates timing control signals for controlling operation timings of the data driver 102, the gate driver 103, and a 3D controller 112.
The timing control signals comprise a gate timing control signal for controlling an operation timing of the gate driver 103 and a data timing control signal for controlling an operation timing of the data driver 102 and the polarity of a data voltage. Also, the timing control signals comprise a 3D timing control signal for controlling an operation timing of the 3D controller 112.
The gate timing control signal comprises a gate start pulse (GSP), a gate shift clock (GSC), a gate output enable signal (GOE), and the like. The gate start pulse (GSP) controls a start operation timing of the gate driver 103. The gate shift clock (GSC) is a clock signal for shifting the gate start pulse (GSP). The gate output enable signal (GOE) controls an output timing of the gate driver 103. The gate timing control signal is generated in the 2D mode and the 3D mode.
The data timing control signal comprises a source start pulse SSP, a source sampling clock SSC, a polarity control signal POL, a source output enable signal SOE, and the like. The source start pulse SSP controls a data sampling start timing of the data driver 102. The source sampling clock SSC is a clock signal for controlling a shift timing of the source start pulse SSP. The polarity control signal POL controls a polarity inversion timing of a data voltage output from the data driver 102. The source output enable signal SOE controls an output timing of the data driver 102. In the instance of an organic light emitting diode display, the polarity control signal POL may be omitted.
The timing controller 101 may control operation timings of the drivers 102 and 103 by a frame frequency of (input frame frequency×i) Hz (i is a positive integer), which is obtained by multiplying an input frame frequency i times. The input frame frequency is 60 Hz in NTSC (National Television Standards Committee) mode and 50 Hz in PAL (Phase-Alternating Line) mode.
The host system 104 may be implemented as any one of the following: a TV system, a navigation system, a set-top box, a DVD player, a bluray player, a personal computer (PC), a home theater system, a broadcast receiver, and a phone system. The host system 104 may supply a mode selection signal for indicating the 2D mode or the 3D mode to the timing controller 101. The host system 104 switches between a 2D mode operation and a 3D mode operation in response to user data input through a user input device 110. The host system 104 may identify the 2D mode operation and the 3D mode operation through a 2D or 3D identification code encoded to input image data, for example, a 2D or 3D identification code which can be coded in an EPG (electronic program guide) or an ESG (electronic service guide) of a digital broadcasting standard.
The user may select between the 2D mode and the 3D mode by a user input device 110. The user input device 110 may comprise a touch screen attached onto or included in the liquid crystal display panel PNL, an on-screen display (OSD), a keyboard, a mouse, and a remote controller.
In a gray-to-gray (GTG) crosstalk evaluation test for the stereoscopic image display of
a) and
a) depicts an example in which the amount of charge in the pixels is large because the pixel voltage rises fast when the difference between the gray level of a single-eye image written to the pixels of an Nth (N is a positive integer) line and the gray level of the other single-eye image written to the pixels of an (N+1)th line. Here, the pixels of the Nth line and the pixels of the (N+1)th line are connected to the same data line and continuously charged with data voltages.
In
For a 3D image, the left-eye image and the right-eye image are divided by binocular parallax, and this may increase the difference in gray level between neighboring pixels and increase the difference in rising characteristics between the neighboring pixels. In contrast, a 2D image is an image which is not divided into a left-eye image and a right-eye image, that is, has no binocular parallax, and therefore the pixel voltages charged in the neighboring pixels mostly have similar gray levels. Accordingly, a gray level difference in the 2D mode causes little difference in the rising characteristics between the pixel voltages charged in the neighboring pixels. In the 2D mode, any difference in the rising characteristics between pixel voltages is generated when consecutive data voltages have the same polarity or different polarities.
The inventors have selectively delayed the rising timing at which a gate pulse rises in the 3D mode, as shown in
Referring to
Similarly to
In the gate-on timing delaying method, only the rising timing of the gate pulse Vgate can be delayed as shown in
The gate-on timing delaying method shown in
a) depicts an example of delaying the gate pulse when data voltages whose gray level difference is small as shown in
Using the gate-on timing delaying method, the rising and falling timings of the gate pulse Vgate can be both delayed, as shown in
a) depicts an example of delaying the gate pulse and increasing the pulse width when data voltages whose gray level difference is small as shown in
Referring to
Assuming that the source output enable signal SOE and the gate output enable signal GOE are generated in the pattern shown in
Referring to
A liquid crystal display temporally and spatially inverts the polarity of a data voltage in order to prevent deterioration of liquid crystals and avoid afterimages and flickering. Most liquid crystal displays inverts the polarity of a data voltage charged in neighboring pixels in units of one dot or two dots, or inverts the polarity of a data voltage Vdata in units of one frame period by dot inversion. Each dot is a pixel or subpixel. The rising edge time of an (N+1)-th data voltage when the N-th and (N+1)-th data voltages have the same polarity is shorter than the rising edge time of the (N+1)-th data voltage when the N-th and (N+1)-th data voltages have different polarities. Accordingly, the rising timing of the gate pulse Vgate may be set to be greater than the maximum rising edge time of the data voltages Vdata that vary with changes in the polarity and gray level of the data voltages.
Referring to
The stereoscopic image display of the embodiment of the invention outputs the data voltage Vdata of a 2D image having no binocular parallax to the data lines 106 of the display panel PNL in the 2D mode, and outputs a gate pulse Vgate to the gate lines 107 without a delay (S34 and S35).
In the driving method of the stereoscopic image display shown in
Referring to
The stereoscopic image display of the embodiment of the invention outputs the data voltage Vdata of a 2D image having no binocular parallax to the data lines 106 of the display panel PNL in the 2D mode, and outputs a gate pulse Vgate to the gate lines 107 without delay (S44). In the 2D and 3D modes, the gate pulse Vgate may be delayed in the same pattern as in
In the driving method of the stereoscopic image display shown in
As described above, gray-to-gray (GTG) crosstalk in a stereoscopic image can be minimized by delaying the rising timing of the gate pulse to a point in time after the rising edge time of the data voltage. As a result, the embodiment of the invention can improve the display quality of a stereoscopic image that the viewer feels or perceives under an actual viewing environment.
Although embodiments have been described with reference to a number of illustrative embodiments thereof, it should be understood that numerous other modifications and embodiments can be devised by those skilled in the art that will fall within the scope of the principles of this disclosure. More particularly, various variations and modifications are possible in the component parts and/or arrangements of the subject combination arrangement within the scope of the disclosure, the drawings and the appended claims. In addition to variations and modifications in the component parts and/or arrangements, alternative uses will also be apparent to those skilled in the art.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
10-2013-0072925 | Jun 2013 | KR | national |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
20100309175 | Ohtsuki | Dec 2010 | A1 |
20120126720 | Kim et al. | May 2012 | A1 |
20120206441 | Liu et al. | Aug 2012 | A1 |
20130002653 | Lee et al. | Jan 2013 | A1 |
20130009941 | Hwang et al. | Jan 2013 | A1 |
20130088654 | Kim et al. | Apr 2013 | A1 |
20130229326 | Kamada | Sep 2013 | A1 |
20130257827 | Hsieh et al. | Oct 2013 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country |
---|---|---|
2010-281957 | Dec 2010 | JP |
2013-11859 | Jan 2013 | JP |
2013-20253 | Jan 2013 | JP |
WO 2012-063830 | May 2012 | WO |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
20140375621 A1 | Dec 2014 | US |