Broadcast Engineering Home Page
  Buyers Guide     Research & Tools  
  Search     in          Tips  


Table of Contents
Magazine Home Page
Magazine Home Page

August 2008
Editorial
Comfort food, comfort technology
Brod Dick EDITORIAL DIRECTOR

Count those pixels
DAVID AUSTERBERRY, EDITOR Send comments to: editor@broadcastengineeringworld.com

EOM
Back to the future
BY ANTHONY R. GARGANO

FCC Update
FCC fine-tunes DTV transition rules
BY HARRY C. MARTIN

Transition to Digital
Understanding muxing
BY ALDO CUGNINI

Computers & Networks
Computer architectures
BY BRAD GILMER

Transmission & Distribution
Seamless ad insertion
BY YANIV BEN-SHUSHAN

Production Clips
TV mics
BY BENNETT LILES

Field Reports
Optoma's BigVizion
BY MICHAEL P. HILL

Sachtler‘s SOOM HiPod
BY BÖRRES WEIFFENBACH

Technology in Transition
Racks and accessories
BY JOHN LUFF

General
Asset management
BY RUSSELL GRUTE

Being there
BY CRAIG BIRKMAIER

Defining asset management
BY ERIC DUFOSSÉ

Editing close to air
DAVID AUSTERBERRY

EEG's iCap
BY PHILIP MCLAUGHLIN

FEEDBACK

FOX Business Network
BY MICHAEL GROTTICELLI

IBC 2008It&s all on display

Monitor and control
BY JOHN HOOKER

Neutrik's OpticalCon
BY MARK BOYADJIAN

NEW PRODUCTS

OmniTek's XR
BY MIKE HODSON

The challenges of storing video
BY ARUN TANEJA

Twister HD PaintStation
BY DAVID-RAY WORTHINGTON

 
Article
 
OmniTek's XR

BY MIKE HODSON

Broadcast Engineering, Aug 1, 2008
  Brought to you by:
 
Print-friendly format
E-mail this information

The advent of digital cinema has significantly impacted those involved in post production of images for theatre presentation. The specifications put together by SMPTE and the Digital Cinema Initiatives group introduced several novel features such as JPEG2000 image compression and the use of new high-resolution 2K and 4K video formats.

They have also specified use of the CIE XYZ color space for encoding of master source material. This color space was created in 1931 following studies of the perception of color by the human eye. Its defining characteristic is its ability to represent every color to which the human eye can respond as a unique combination of three positive parameters that doesn't depend on the devices used to produce the light.

The issue at hand

The problem for post production is that the RGB color space typically used in broadcast is limited in the range of colors it can represent as a result of the way the responses of the red, green and blue cones of the human eye overlap. Blue-green colors are a particular problem. A monochromatic light source of approximately 500nm should only produce a response in blue and green, but any color produced by mixing monochromatic green and blue light sources will also stimulate red cones. It is therefore impossible to represent this color in the RGB color space.

The scope of the RGB color space is readily illustrated on the CIE chromaticity diagram, as shown in Figure 1. The outer curved boundary of the colored region represents the eye's response to monochromatic light in the visible part of the spectrum, while the inner region represents its response to mixtures of those colors. The vertices of the triangle represent the colors produced by red, blue and green photo devices, while the triangle encloses all the different colors that can be created using these devices.

Conversion of image material encoded using XYZ color space into RGB color space uses a matrix that maps XYZ values into RGB values. Only positive RGB values have any meaning for an RGB display, so any negative values that result from the conversion are replaced by zero. Colors that fall within the gamut of the RGB triangle have positive values in RGB color space and so translate directly. Conversion of colors that fall outside the RGB color space, however, result in negative values for either R, G or B. The result of this is to substitute the original color by one on the edge of the RGB triangle.

The effect of this color conversion on the resulting images is crucial to colorists working in the broadcast industry not just for aesthetic reasons, but also for the range of fringing and other artifacts that can result. Reducing the color saturation of the image helps by pulling each color in toward the white point at the center of the chromaticity diagram. However, doing this in a controlled manner requires detailed information about the location and extent of the problem areas in the video images. This in turn requires test and measurement equipment that can both handle the video formats used by digital cinema and provide information about color gamut in both XYZ color space and RGB color space on a pixel-by-pixel basis.

The solution

The OmniTek XR waveform monitor and image analyzer provides such support. It can take either the source or the output from the colorist's color grading equipment and, in real time, display waveforms and histograms, not just of the XYZ source but also of the equivalent RGB or YUV video.

Of particular value to the XYZ conversion problem is the color gamut display. This may be set up to display equivalent RGB values as bar graphs, with values that exceed acceptable thresholds shown in a contrasting color. It also keeps a count of the number of pixels for which the conversion produces values outside the required range and measures of these effects as a percentage of the overall area.

The XR system also has the ability to highlight the pixels affected as part of a live display either on a monitor or the built-in video proxy, thereby giving the colorist an easy way of seeing the scope of the problem that needs to be dealt with.


Mike Hodson is president of OmniTek.



© 2008, PRIMEDIA Business Magazines & Media Inc. All rights reserved. This article is protected by United States copyright and other intellectual property laws and may not be reproduced, rewritten, distributed, redisseminated, transmitted, displayed, published or broadcast, directly or indirectly, in any medium without the prior written permission of PRIMEDIA Business Magazines & Media Inc.

Get Copyright Clearance Want to use this article? Click here for options!
© 2008, PRIMEDIA Business Magazines & Media Inc.

Print-friendly format E-mail this information
 
 
Contact Us      For Advertisers      Privacy Policy     

 

©2008, Penton Media, Inc. All rights reserved.