Understanding HDR scene capture and appearance [E-Book] / by John McCann, Vassilios Vonikakis, and Alessandro Rizzi.
High dynamic range (HDR) capture and display systems have proven capable of dramatically improving images, ranging from Renaissance paintings and early silver-halide photography to sensor research, camera design, image processing, display technology, and human-vision research. This Spotlight provide...
Saved in:
Full text |
|
Personal Name(s): | McCann, John J., author |
Rizzi, Alessandro, author / Vonikakis, Vassilios, author | |
Imprint: |
Bellingham, Washington, USA :
SPIE,
2017
|
Physical Description: |
1 online resource (ix, 83 pages) : illustrations. |
ISBN: |
9781510618534 |
DOI: |
10.1117/3.2315540 |
Series Title: |
/* Depending on the record driver, $field may either be an array with
"name" and "number" keys or a flat string containing only the series
name. We should account for both cases to maximize compatibility. */?>
SPIE. Spotlight ;
SL35 |
Subject (ZB): | |
Subject (LOC): | |
Classification: |
- Preface
- 1. Introduction
- 2. Multiple exposures
- 3. Camera reciprocity and linearity
- 4. Optical veiling glare
- 5. Faith in a camera’s digital values
- 6. Multiple exposures: a new application for an old trick
- 7. Camera limits in LDR single exposures
- 8. Measure the effects of glare in dark image segments
- 9. Need for a paradigm: "the path not taken"
- 10. Vision-based models - the general solution is spatial image processing
- 11. LDR and HDR color constancy
- 12. Surrounds, averages, and histograms
- 13. Appearance and scene maxima
- 14. Retinal contrast
- 15. Review
- Acknowledgments
- References
- Recommended reading
- Glossary
- Acronyms.