WO2021222022A1 - System and method for a multi-primary wide gamut color system - Google Patents
System and method for a multi-primary wide gamut color system Download PDFInfo
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- WO2021222022A1 WO2021222022A1 PCT/US2021/028857 US2021028857W WO2021222022A1 WO 2021222022 A1 WO2021222022 A1 WO 2021222022A1 US 2021028857 W US2021028857 W US 2021028857W WO 2021222022 A1 WO2021222022 A1 WO 2021222022A1
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- G—PHYSICS
- G09—EDUCATION; CRYPTOGRAPHY; DISPLAY; ADVERTISING; SEALS
- G09G—ARRANGEMENTS OR CIRCUITS FOR CONTROL OF INDICATING DEVICES USING STATIC MEANS TO PRESENT VARIABLE INFORMATION
- G09G5/00—Control arrangements or circuits for visual indicators common to cathode-ray tube indicators and other visual indicators
- G09G5/02—Control arrangements or circuits for visual indicators common to cathode-ray tube indicators and other visual indicators characterised by the way in which colour is displayed
-
- H—ELECTRICITY
- H04—ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
- H04N—PICTORIAL COMMUNICATION, e.g. TELEVISION
- H04N9/00—Details of colour television systems
- H04N9/12—Picture reproducers
- H04N9/31—Projection devices for colour picture display, e.g. using electronic spatial light modulators [ESLM]
- H04N9/3102—Projection devices for colour picture display, e.g. using electronic spatial light modulators [ESLM] using two-dimensional electronic spatial light modulators
- H04N9/3105—Projection devices for colour picture display, e.g. using electronic spatial light modulators [ESLM] using two-dimensional electronic spatial light modulators for displaying all colours simultaneously, e.g. by using two or more electronic spatial light modulators
-
- H—ELECTRICITY
- H04—ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
- H04N—PICTORIAL COMMUNICATION, e.g. TELEVISION
- H04N9/00—Details of colour television systems
- H04N9/12—Picture reproducers
- H04N9/31—Projection devices for colour picture display, e.g. using electronic spatial light modulators [ESLM]
- H04N9/3141—Constructional details thereof
- H04N9/3147—Multi-projection systems
-
- H—ELECTRICITY
- H04—ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
- H04N—PICTORIAL COMMUNICATION, e.g. TELEVISION
- H04N9/00—Details of colour television systems
- H04N9/12—Picture reproducers
- H04N9/31—Projection devices for colour picture display, e.g. using electronic spatial light modulators [ESLM]
- H04N9/3179—Video signal processing therefor
- H04N9/3182—Colour adjustment, e.g. white balance, shading or gamut
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- G—PHYSICS
- G09—EDUCATION; CRYPTOGRAPHY; DISPLAY; ADVERTISING; SEALS
- G09G—ARRANGEMENTS OR CIRCUITS FOR CONTROL OF INDICATING DEVICES USING STATIC MEANS TO PRESENT VARIABLE INFORMATION
- G09G2300/00—Aspects of the constitution of display devices
- G09G2300/04—Structural and physical details of display devices
- G09G2300/0439—Pixel structures
- G09G2300/0452—Details of colour pixel setup, e.g. pixel composed of a red, a blue and two green components
-
- G—PHYSICS
- G09—EDUCATION; CRYPTOGRAPHY; DISPLAY; ADVERTISING; SEALS
- G09G—ARRANGEMENTS OR CIRCUITS FOR CONTROL OF INDICATING DEVICES USING STATIC MEANS TO PRESENT VARIABLE INFORMATION
- G09G2320/00—Control of display operating conditions
- G09G2320/02—Improving the quality of display appearance
- G09G2320/0242—Compensation of deficiencies in the appearance of colours
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- G—PHYSICS
- G09—EDUCATION; CRYPTOGRAPHY; DISPLAY; ADVERTISING; SEALS
- G09G—ARRANGEMENTS OR CIRCUITS FOR CONTROL OF INDICATING DEVICES USING STATIC MEANS TO PRESENT VARIABLE INFORMATION
- G09G2320/00—Control of display operating conditions
- G09G2320/06—Adjustment of display parameters
- G09G2320/0666—Adjustment of display parameters for control of colour parameters, e.g. colour temperature
-
- G—PHYSICS
- G09—EDUCATION; CRYPTOGRAPHY; DISPLAY; ADVERTISING; SEALS
- G09G—ARRANGEMENTS OR CIRCUITS FOR CONTROL OF INDICATING DEVICES USING STATIC MEANS TO PRESENT VARIABLE INFORMATION
- G09G2340/00—Aspects of display data processing
- G09G2340/06—Colour space transformation
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- G—PHYSICS
- G09—EDUCATION; CRYPTOGRAPHY; DISPLAY; ADVERTISING; SEALS
- G09G—ARRANGEMENTS OR CIRCUITS FOR CONTROL OF INDICATING DEVICES USING STATIC MEANS TO PRESENT VARIABLE INFORMATION
- G09G2360/00—Aspects of the architecture of display systems
- G09G2360/16—Calculation or use of calculated indices related to luminance levels in display data
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- G—PHYSICS
- G09—EDUCATION; CRYPTOGRAPHY; DISPLAY; ADVERTISING; SEALS
- G09G—ARRANGEMENTS OR CIRCUITS FOR CONTROL OF INDICATING DEVICES USING STATIC MEANS TO PRESENT VARIABLE INFORMATION
- G09G2370/00—Aspects of data communication
- G09G2370/10—Use of a protocol of communication by packets in interfaces along the display data pipeline
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- G—PHYSICS
- G09—EDUCATION; CRYPTOGRAPHY; DISPLAY; ADVERTISING; SEALS
- G09G—ARRANGEMENTS OR CIRCUITS FOR CONTROL OF INDICATING DEVICES USING STATIC MEANS TO PRESENT VARIABLE INFORMATION
- G09G2370/00—Aspects of data communication
- G09G2370/14—Use of low voltage differential signaling [LVDS] for display data communication
-
- G—PHYSICS
- G09—EDUCATION; CRYPTOGRAPHY; DISPLAY; ADVERTISING; SEALS
- G09G—ARRANGEMENTS OR CIRCUITS FOR CONTROL OF INDICATING DEVICES USING STATIC MEANS TO PRESENT VARIABLE INFORMATION
- G09G5/00—Control arrangements or circuits for visual indicators common to cathode-ray tube indicators and other visual indicators
- G09G5/003—Details of a display terminal, the details relating to the control arrangement of the display terminal and to the interfaces thereto
- G09G5/006—Details of the interface to the display terminal
Definitions
- U.S. Application No. 16/860,769 is a continuation-in-part of U.S. Application No. 16/853,203, filed April 20, 2020, which is a continuation-in-part of U.S. Patent Application No. 16/831,157, filed March 26, 2020, which is a continuation of U.S. Patent Application No. 16/659,307, filed October 21, 2019, now U.S. Patent No. 10,607,527, which is related to and claims priority from U.S. Provisional Patent Application No. 62/876,878, filed July 22, 2019, U.S. Provisional Patent Application No. 62/847,630, filed May 14, 2019, U.S. Provisional Patent Application No. 62/805,705, filed February 14, 2019, and U.S. Provisional Patent Application No. 62/750,673, filed October 25, 2018, each of which is incorporated herein by reference in its entirety.
- U.S. Application No. 16/887,807 is a continuation-in-part of U.S. Application No. 16/860,769, filed April 28, 2020, which is a continuation-in-part of U.S. Application No. 16/853,203, filed April 20, 2020, which is a continuation-in-part of U.S. Patent Application No. 16/831,157, filed March 26, 2020, which is a continuation of U.S. Patent Application No. 16/659,307, filed October 21, 2019, now U.S. Patent No. 10,607,527, which is related to and claims priority from U.S. Provisional Patent Application No. 62/876,878, filed July 22, 2019, U.S. Provisional Patent Application No.
- U.S. Application No. 17/009,408 is a continuation-in-part of U.S. Application No. 16/887,807, filed May 29, 2020, which is a continuation-in-part of U.S. Application No. 16/860,769, filed April 28, 2020, which is a continuation-in-part of U.S. Application No. 16/853,203, filed April 20, 2020, which is a continuation-in-part of U.S. Patent Application No. 16/831,157, filed March 26, 2020, which is a continuation of U.S. Patent Application No. 16/659,307, filed October 21, 2019, now U.S. Patent No. 10,607,527, which is related to and claims priority from U.S. Provisional Patent Application No.
- U.S. Application No. 17/060,959 is a continuation-in-part of U.S. Application No. 17/009,408, filed September 1, 2020, which is a continuation-in-part of U.S. Application No. 16/887,807, filed May 29, 2020, which is a continuation-in-part of U.S. Application No. 16/860,769, filed April 28, 2020, which is a continuation-in-part of U.S. Application No. 16/853,203, filed April 20, 2020, which is a continuation-in-part of U.S. Patent Application No. 16/831,157, filed March 26, 2020, which is a continuation of U.S. Patent Application No. 16/659,307, filed October 21, 2019, now U.S.
- Patent No. 10,607,527 which is related to and claims priority from U.S. Provisional Patent Application No. 62/876,878, filed July 22, 2019, U.S. Provisional Patent Application No. 62/847,630, filed May 14, 2019, U.S. Provisional Patent Application No. 62/805,705, filed February 14, 2019, and U.S. Provisional Patent Application No. 62/750,673, filed October 25, 2018, each of which is incorporated herein by reference in its entirety.
- U.S. Application No. 17/180,441 is a continuation-in-part ofU.S. Application No. 17/009,408, filed September 1, 2020, which is a continuation-in-part ofU.S. Application No.
- the present invention relates to color systems, and more specifically to a wide gamut color system with an increased number of primary colors.
- U.S. Patent No. 10,222,263 for RGB value calculation device by inventor Yasuyuki Shigezane, filed February 6, 2017 and issued March 5, 2019, is directed to a microcomputer that equally divides the circumference of an RGB circle into 6xn (n is an integer of 1 or more) parts, and calculates an RGB value of each divided color. (255, 0, 0) is stored as a reference RGB value of a reference color in a ROM in the microcomputer.
- the microcomputer converts the reference RGB value depending on an angular difference of the RGB circle between a designated color whose RGB value is to be found and the reference color, and assumes the converted RGB value as an RGB value of the designated color.
- U.S. Patent No. 9,373,305 for Semiconductor device, image processing system and program by inventor Hiorfumi Kawaguchi, filed May 29, 2015 and issued June 21, 2016, is directed to an image process device including a display panel operable to provide an input interface for receiving an input of an adjustment value of at least a part of color attributes of each vertex of n axes (n is an integer equal to or greater than 3) serving as adjustment axes in an RGB color space, and an adjustment data generation unit operable to calculate the degree of influence indicative of a following index of each of the n-axis vertices, for each of the n axes, on a basis of distance between each of the n-axis vertices and a target point which is an arbitrary lattice point in the RGB color space, and operable to calculate adjusted coordinates of the target point in the RGB color space.
- U.S. Publication No. 20130278993 for Color-mixing bi-primary color systems for displays by inventor Heikenfeld, et.al, filed September 1, 2011 and published October 24, 2013, is directed to a display pixel.
- the pixel includes first and second substrates arranged to define a channel.
- a fluid is located within the channel and includes a first colorant and a second colorant.
- the first colorant has a first charge and a color.
- the second colorant has a second charge that is opposite in polarity to the first charge and a color that is complimentary to the color of the first colorant.
- a first electrode, with a voltage source is operably coupled to the fluid and configured to moving one or both of the first and second colorants within the fluid and alter at least one spectral property of the pixel.
- U.S. Patent No. 8,599,226 for Device and method of data conversion for wide gamut displays by inventor Ben-Chorin, et. al, filed February 13, 2012 and issued December 3, 2013, is directed to a method and system for converting color image data from a, for example, three-dimensional color space format to a format usable by an n-primary display, wherein n is greater than or equal to 3.
- the system may define a two-dimensional sub-space having a plurality of two-dimensional positions, each position representing a set of n primary color values and a third, scaleable coordinate value for generating an n-primary display input signal.
- the system may receive a three-dimensional color space input signal including out-of range pixel data not reproducible by a three-primary additive display, and may convert the data to side gamut color image pixel data suitable for driving the wide gamut color display.
- U.S. Patent No. 8,081,835 for Multiprimary color sub-pixel rendering with metameric filtering by inventor Elliot, et. al, filed July 13, 2010 and issued December 20, 2011, is directed to systems and methods of rendering image data to multiprimary displays that adjusts image data across metamers as herein disclosed.
- the metamer filtering may be based upon input image content and may optimize sub-pixel values to improve image rendering accuracy or perception. The optimizations may be made according to many possible desired effects.
- One embodiment comprises a display system comprising: a display, said display capable of selecting from a set of image data values, said set comprising at least one metamer; an input image data unit; a spatial frequency detection unit, said spatial frequency detection unit extracting a spatial frequency characteristic from said input image data; and a selection unit, said unit selecting image data from said metamer according to said spatial frequency characteristic.
- U.S. Patent No. 7,916,939 for High brightness wide gamut display by inventor Roth, et. al, filed November 30, 2009 and issued March 29, 2011, is directed to a device to produce a color image, the device including a color filtering arrangement to produce at least four colors, each color produced by a filter on a color filtering mechanism having a relative segment size, wherein the relative segment sizes of at least two of the primary colors differ.
- U.S. Patent No. 6,769,772 for Six color display apparatus having increased color gamut by inventor Roddy, et. al, filed October 11, 2002 and issued August 3, 2004, is directed to a display system for digital color images using six color light sources or two or more multicolor LED arrays or OLEDs to provide an expanded color gamut. Apparatus uses two or more spatial light modulators, which may be cycled between two or more color light sources or LED arrays to provide a six-color display output. Pairing of modulated colors using relative luminance helps to minimize flicker effects.
- the present invention provides system for displaying a primary color system including a set of image data, an image data converter, a set of Session Description Protocol (SDP) parameters, and at least one display device, wherein the set of image data includes primary color data for at least four primary color values, wherein the at least one display device and the image data converter are in network communication, and wherein the image data converter is operable to convert the set of image data for display on the at least one display device.
- SDP Session Description Protocol
- the present invention provides a system for displaying a primary color system including a set of image data, an image data converter, wherein the image data converter includes a digital interface, wherein the digital interface is operable to encode and decode the set of image data, a set of Session Description Protocol (SDP) parameters, and at least one display device, wherein the set of image data further includes primary color data for at least four primary color values, wherein the at least four primary color values include a cyan primary, wherein the at least one display device and the image data converter are in network communication, and wherein the image data converter is operable to convert the set of image data for display on the at least one display device.
- SDP Session Description Protocol
- the present invention provides a system for displaying a primary color system including a set of image data, an image data converter, wherein the image data converter includes a digital interface, wherein the digital interface is operable to encode and decode the set of image data, a set of Session Description Protocol (SDP) parameters, and at least one display device, wherein the set of image data further includes primary color data for at least four primary color values, wherein the at least four primary color values include at least one white emitter, wherein the at least one display device and the image data converter are in network communication, and wherein the image data converter is operable to convert the set of image data for display on the at least one display device.
- SDP Session Description Protocol
- the present invention provides a method for displaying a multi-primary color system including providing a set of image data, encoding the set of image data using a digital interface of an image data converter, wherein the image data converter is in network communication with at least one display device, decoding the set of image data using the digital interface of the image data converter, and converting the set of image data for display on the at least one display device.
- FIG. 1 illustrates one embodiment of a four primary system including a red primary, a green primary, a cyan primary, and a blue primary.
- FIG. 2 illustrates one embodiment of a four primary system including a red primary, a first green primary, a second green primary, and a blue primary.
- FIG. 3 illustrates another embodiment of a four primary system including a red primary, a first green primary, a second green primary, and a blue primary.
- FIG. 4 illustrates one embodiment of a five primary system including a red primary, a green primary, a cyan primary, a blue primary, and a white emitter.
- FIG. 5 illustrates one embodiment of a five primary system including a red primary, a first green primary, a second green primary, a blue primary, and a white emitter.
- FIG. 6 illustrates another embodiment of a five primary system including a red primary, a first green primary, a second green primary, a blue primary, and a white emitter.
- FIG. 7 illustrates another embodiment of a five primary system including a red primary, a first green primary, a second green primary, a blue primary, and a white emitter.
- FIG. 5 illustrates one embodiment of a five primary system including a red primary, a first green primary, a second green primary, a blue primary, and a white emitter.
- FIG. 8 illustrates one embodiment of a six primary system including a red primary, a green primary, a blue primary, a cyan primary, a magenta primary, and a yellow primary (“6P-B”) compared to ITU-R BT.709-6.
- FIG. 9 illustrates another embodiment of a six primary system including a red primary, a green primary, a blue primary, a cyan primary, a magenta primary, and a yellow primary (“6P-C”) compared to SMPTE RP431 -2 for a D60 white point.
- FIG. 10 illustrates yet another embodiment of a six primary system including a red primary, a green primary, a blue primary, a cyan primary, a magenta primary, and a yellow primary (“6P-C”) compared to SMPTE RP431 -2 for a D65 white point.
- 6P-C yellow primary
- FIG. 11 illustrates Super 6Pa compared to 6P-C.
- FIG. 12 illustrates Super 6Pb compared to Super 6Pa and 6P-C.
- FIG. 13 illustrates one embodiment of a six primary system including a red primary, a yellow primary, a green primary, a cyan primary, a blue primary, and a white emitter.
- FIG. 14 illustrates one embodiment of a six primary system including a red primary, a first green primary, a second green primary, a blue primary, a first white emitter, and a second white emitter.
- FIG. 15 A illustrates one embodiment of a six primary system including a a red primary, a green primary, a blue primary, a first white emitter, a second white emitter, and a third white emitter.
- FIG. 15B illustrates an example of the emission spectra of a six primary system including a red primary, a green primary, a blue primary, a first white emitter, a second white emitter, and a third white emitter.
- FIG. 15C illustrates an example of the emission spectra of a six primary system including a first red primary, a second red primary, a first green primary, a second green primary, a first blue primary, and a second blue primary.
- FIG. 16 illustrates an embodiment of an encode and decode system for a multi primary color system.
- FIG. 17 illustrates a sequential method where three color primaries are passed to the transport format as full bit level image data and inserted as normal (“System 2”).
- FIG. 18 illustrates one embodiment of a system encode and decode process using a dual link method (“System 3”).
- FIG. 19 illustrates one embodiment of an encoding process using a dual link method.
- FIG. 20 illustrates one embodiment of a decoding process using a dual link method.
- FIG. 21 illustrates one embodiment of a six-primary color system encode using a
- FIG. 22 illustrates one embodiment for a method to package six channels of primary information into the three standard primary channels used in current serial video standards by modifying bit numbers for a 12-bit SDI and a 10-bit SDI.
- FIG. 23 illustrates a simplified diagram estimating perceived viewer sensation as code values define each hue angle.
- FIG. 24 illustrates one embodiment for a method of stacking/encoding six-primary color information using a 4:4:4 video system.
- FIG. 25 illustrates one embodiment for a method of unstacking/decoding six primary color information using a 4:4:4 video system.
- FIG. 26 illustrates one embodiment of a 4:4:4 decoder for a six-primary color system.
- FIG. 27 illustrates one embodiment of an optical filter.
- FIG. 28 illustrates another embodiment of an optical filter.
- FIG. 29 illustrates an embodiment of the present invention for sending six primary colors to a standardized transport format.
- FIG. 30 illustrates one embodiment of a decode process adding a pixel delay to the RGB data for realigning the channels to a common pixel timing.
- FIG. 31 illustrates one embodiment of an encode process for 4:2:2 video for packaging five channels of information into the standard three-channel designs.
- FIG. 32 illustrates one embodiment for a non-constant luminance encode for a six primary color system.
- FIG. 33 illustrates one embodiment of a packaging process for a six-primary color system.
- FIG. 34 illustrates a 4:2:2 unstack process for a six-primary color system.
- FIG. 35 illustrates one embodiment of a process to inversely quantize each individual color and pass the data through an electronic optical function transfer (EOTF) in a non-constant luminance system.
- EOTF electronic optical function transfer
- FIG. 36 illustrates one embodiment of a constant luminance encode for a six primary color system.
- FIG. 37 illustrates one embodiment of a constant luminance decode for a six primary color system.
- FIG. 38 illustrates one example of 4:2:2 non-constant luminance encoding.
- FIG. 39 illustrates one embodiment of a non-constant luminance decoding system.
- FIG. 40 illustrates one embodiment of a 4:2:2 constant luminance encoding system.
- FIG. 41 illustrates one embodiment of a 4:2:2 constant luminance decoding system.
- FIG. 42 illustrates a raster encoding diagram of sample placements for a six primary color system.
- FIG. 43 illustrates one embodiment of the six-primary color unstack process in a 4:2:2 video system.
- FIG. 44 illustrates one embodiment of mapping input to the six-primary color system unstack process.
- FIG. 45 illustrates one embodiment of mapping the output of a six-primary color system decoder.
- FIG. 46 illustrates one embodiment of mapping the RGB decode for a six-primary color system.
- FIG. 47 illustrates one embodiment of an unstack system for a six-primary color system.
- FIG. 48 illustrates one embodiment of a legacy RGB decoder for a six-primary, non-constant luminance system.
- FIG. 49 illustrates one embodiment of a legacy RGB decoder for a six-primary, constant luminance system.
- FIG. 50 illustrates one embodiment of a six-primary color system with output to a legacy RGB system.
- FIG. 51 illustrates one embodiment of six-primary color output using a non constant luminance decoder.
- FIG. 52 illustrates one embodiment of a legacy RGB process within a six-primary color system.
- FIG. 53 illustrates one embodiment of packing six-primary color system image data into an IC-jCp (ITP) format.
- FIG. 54 illustrates one embodiment of a six-primary color system converting RGBCYM image data into XYZ image data for an ITP format.
- FIG. 55 illustrates one embodiment of six-primary color mapping with SMPTE ST424.
- FIG. 56 illustrates one embodiment of a six-primary color system readout for a SMPTE ST424 standard.
- FIG. 57 illustrates a process of 2160p transport over 12G-SDI.
- FIG. 58 illustrates one embodiment for mapping RGBCYM data to the SMPTE ST2082 standard for a six-primary color system.
- FIG. 59 illustrates one embodiment for mapping YRGB YCYM CR CB CC CY data to the SMPTE ST2082 standard for a six-primary color system.
- FIG. 60 illustrates one embodiment for mapping six-primary color system data using the SMPTE ST292 standard.
- FIG. 61 illustrates one embodiment of the readout for a six-primary color system using the SMPTE ST292 standard.
- FIG. 62 illustrates modifications to the SMPTE ST352 standards for a six-primary color system.
- FIG. 63 illustrates modifications to the SMPTE ST2022 standard for a six-primary color system.
- FIG. 64 illustrates a table of 4:4:4 sampling for a six-primary color system for a 10-bit video system.
- FIG. 65 illustrates a table of 4:4:4 sampling for a six-primary color system for a 12-bit video system.
- FIG. 66 illustrates sequence substitutions for 10-bit and 12-bit video in 4:2:2 sampling systems in a Y Cb Cr Cc Cy color space.
- FIG. 67 illustrates sample placements of six-primary system components for a 4:2:2 sampling system image.
- FIG. 68 illustrates sequence substitutions for 10-bit and 12-bit video in 4:2:0 sampling systems using a Y Cb Cr Cc Cy color space.
- FIG. 69 illustrates sample placements of six-primary system components for a 4:2:0 sampling system image.
- FIG. 70 illustrates modifications to SMPTE ST2110-20 for a 10-bit six-primary color system in 4:4:4 video.
- FIG. 71 illustrates modifications to SMPTE ST2110-20 for a 12-bit six-primary color system in 4:4:4 video.
- FIG. 72 illustrates modifications to SMPTE ST2110-20 for a 10-bit six primary color system in 4:2:2 video.
- FIG. 73 illustrates modifications to SMPTE ST2110-20 for a 12-bit six-primary color system in 4:2:0 video.
- FIG. 74 illustrates an RGB sampling transmission for a 4:4:4 sampling system.
- FIG. 75 illustrates a RGBCYM sampling transmission for a 4:4:4 sampling system.
- FIG. 76 illustrates an example of System 2 to RGBCYM 4:4:4 transmission.
- FIG. 77 illustrates a Y Cb Cr sampling transmission using a 4:2:2 sampling system.
- FIG. 78 illustrates a Y Cr Cb Cc Cy sampling transmission using a 4:2:2 sampling system.
- FIG. 79 illustrates an example of a System 2 to Y Cr Cb Cc Cy 4:2:2 Transmission as non-constant luminance.
- FIG. 80 illustrates a Y Cb Cr sampling transmission using a 4:2:0 sampling system.
- FIG. 81 illustrates a Y Cr Cb Cc Cy sampling transmission using a 4:2:0 sampling system.
- FIG. 82 illustrates a dual stack LCD projection system for a six-primary color system.
- FIG. 83 illustrates one embodiment of a single projector.
- FIG. 84 illustrates a six-primary color system using a single projector and reciprocal mirrors.
- FIG. 85 illustrates a dual stack DMD projection system for a six-primary color system.
- FIG. 86 illustrates one embodiment of a single DMD projector solution.
- FIG. 87 illustrates one embodiment of a color filter array for a six-primary color system with a white OLED monitor.
- FIG. 88 illustrates one embodiment of an optical filter array for a six-primary color system with a white OLED monitor.
- FIG. 89 illustrates one embodiment of a matrix of an LCD drive for a six-primary color system with a backlight illuminated LCD monitor.
- FIG. 90 illustrates one embodiment of an optical filter array for a six-primary color system with a backlight illuminated LCD monitor.
- FIG. 91 illustrates an array for a Quantum Dot (QD) display device.
- FIG. 92 illustrates one embodiment of an array for a six-primary color system for use with a direct emissive assembled display.
- FIG. 93 illustrates one embodiment of a six-primary color system in an emissive display that does not incorporate color filtered subpixels.
- FIG. 94 illustrates one embodiment of a primary triad system for a multi-primary system including red, green, blue, cyan, magenta, and yellow primaries.
- FIG. 95 illustrates one embodiment of out-of-gamut color mapping.
- FIG. 96 illustrates another embodiment of out-of-gamut color mapping.
- FIG. 97 illustrates a process to validate the ACES-to-6P-to-ACES conversion process according to one embodiment of the present invention.
- FIG. 98 illustrates one embodiment of a system with at least eight primary triads.
- FIG. 99 illustrates a flow chart of an embodiment of a system with eight triads in a six-primary system.
- FIG. 100 illustrates one embodiment of a system with primary triads including a virtual primary.
- FIG. 101 is a schematic diagram of an embodiment of the invention illustrating a computer system.
- the present invention is generally directed to a multi-primary color system.
- the present invention provides system for displaying a primary color system including a set of image data, an image data converter, a set of Session Description Protocol (SDP) parameters, and at least one display device, wherein the set of image data includes primary color data for at least four primary color values, wherein the at least one display device and the image data converter are in network communication, and wherein the image data converter is operable to convert the set of image data for display on the at least one display device.
- the at least one display device is operable to display the primary color system based on the set of image data, wherein the primary color system displayed on the at least one display device is based on the set of image data.
- the at least four primary color values include at least one white emitter. In one embodiment, the at least four primary color values include a red primary, a green primary, a cyan primary, and a blue primary. In one embodiment, the at least four primary color values include a red primary, a first green primary, a second green primary, and a blue primary, wherein the first green primary and the second green primary have different chromaticity values. In one embodiment, the at least four primary color values include a red primary, a green primary, a cyan primary, a blue primary, and a white emitter. In one embodiment, the at least four primary color values include a red primary, a yellow primary, a green primary, a cyan primary, and a blue primary.
- the at least four primary color values include a red primary, a first green primary, a second green primary, a blue primary, and a white emitter, wherein the first green primary and the second green primary have different chromaticity values.
- the at least four primary color values include a red primary, a green primary, a blue primary, a cyan primary, a magenta primary, and a yellow primary.
- the at least four primary color values include a red primary, a yellow primary, a green primary, a cyan primary, a blue primary, and a white emitter.
- the at least four primaries include a red primary, a first green primary, a second green primary, a blue primary, a first white emitter, and a second white emitter, wherein the first green primary and the second green primary have different chromaticity values, and wherein the first white emitter and the second white emitter have different color temperatures.
- the at least four primary color values include a first red primary, a second red primary, a first green primary, a second green primary, a first blue primary, and a second blue primary, wherein the first red primary, the first green primary, and the first blue primary are narrow band primaries, and wherein the second red primary, the second green primary, and the second blue primary are wide band primaries.
- the system further includes a set of saturation data corresponding to the set of image data, wherein the set of image data includes a first set of color channel data and a second set of color channel data, and wherein the set of saturation data is used to extend a set of hue angles for the first set of color channel data and the second set of color channel data.
- the set of image data includes a first set of color channel data and a second set of color channel data
- the image data converter further includes a first link component and a second link component, wherein the first link component is operable to transport the first set of color channel data to the at least one display device, and wherein the second link component is operable to transport the second set of color channel data to the at least one display device in parallel with the first link component.
- the present invention provides a system for displaying a primary color system including a set of image data, an image data converter, wherein the image data converter includes a digital interface, wherein the digital interface is operable to encode and decode the set of image data, a set of Session Description Protocol (SDP) parameters, and at least one display device, wherein the set of image data further includes primary color data for at least four primary color values, wherein the at least four primary color values include a cyan primary, wherein the at least one display device and the image data converter are in network communication, and wherein the image data converter is operable to convert the set of image data for display on the at least one display device.
- the cyan primary is positioned to limit maximum saturation.
- the cyan primary is positioned by expanding a set of hue angles for the at least four primaries.
- the present invention provides a system for displaying a primary color system including a set of image data, an image data converter, wherein the image data converter includes a digital interface, wherein the digital interface is operable to encode and decode the set of image data, a set of Session Description Protocol (SDP) parameters, and at least one display device, wherein the set of image data further includes primary color data for at least four primary color values, wherein the at least four primary color values include at least one white emitter, wherein the at least one display device and the image data converter are in network communication, and wherein the image data converter is operable to convert the set of image data for display on the at least one display device.
- SDP Session Description Protocol
- the at least one white emitter includes at least three white emitters, wherein the at least three white emitters each have a different color temperature, and wherein the at least three white emitters include a mid-Kelvin white emitter. In one embodiment, the mid-Kelvin white emitter includes a green bias.
- the present invention provides a method for displaying a multi-primary color system including providing a set of image data, encoding the set of image data using a digital interface of an image data converter, wherein the image data converter is in network communication with at least one display device, decoding the set of image data using the digital interface of the image data converter, and converting the set of image data for display on the at least one display device.
- the method includes modifying a set of Session Description Protocol (SDP) parameters based on the conversion.
- the method includes processing the set of image data using at least one transfer function (TF).
- the method includes the image data converter converting a bit level of the set of image data, thereby creating an updated bit level.
- the method includes displaying the multi-primary system on the at least one display device based on the set of image data.
- the present invention relates to color systems.
- a multitude of color systems are known, but they continue to suffer numerous issues.
- Enhancements to the television system have expanded from the early CCIR 601 standard to ITU-R BT.709-6, to SMPTE RP431-2, and ITU-R BT.2020.
- Each one has increased the gamut of visible colors by expanding the distance from the reference white point to the position of the Red (R), Green (G), and Blue (B) color primaries (collectively known as “RGB”) in chromaticity space. While this approach works, it has several disadvantages.
- Enhancements in brightness have been accomplished through larger backlights or higher efficiency phosphors. Encoding of higher dynamic ranges is addressed using higher range, more perceptually uniform electro-optical transfer functions to support these enhancements to brightness technology, while wider color gamuts are produced by using narrow bandwidth emissions. Narrower bandwidth emitters result in the viewer experiencing higher color saturation. But there can be a disconnect between how saturation is produced and how it is controlled. What is believed to occur when changing saturation is that increasing color values of a color primary represents an increase to saturation. This is not true, as changing saturation requires the variance of a color primary spectral output as parametric. There are no variable spectrum displays available to date as the technology to do so has not been commercially developed, nor has the new infrastructure required to support this been discussed.
- the method that a display changes for viewer color sensation is by changing color luminance. As data values increase, the color primary gets brighter. Changes to color saturation are accomplished by varying the brightness of all three primaries and taking advantage of the dominant color theory.
- VASARI Visual Arts System for Archiving and Retrieval of Images
- the multi-primary system of the present invention includes at least four primaries.
- the at least four primaries preferably include at least one red primary, at least one green primary, and/or at least one blue primary.
- the at least four primaries include a cyan primary, a magenta primary, and/or a yellow primary.
- the at least four primaries include at least one white emitter.
- the at least one white emitter includes a D65 white emitter, a D60 white emitter, a D45 white emitter, a D27 white emitter, and/or a D25 white emitter.
- using a D65 white emitter eliminates most of the problems with metamerism.
- the at least one white emitter is a single white emitter that matches the white point (e.g., a D65 white emitter for a D65 white point).
- the at least one white emitter is at least two white emitters.
- the at least two white emitters are preferably separated such that a linear combination of the at least two white emitters covers a desired white Kelvin range.
- the at least two white emitters include a D65 white emitter and a D27 white emitter.
- the at least two white emitters include a D65 white emitter and a D25 white emitter.
- the at least two white emitters include three white emitters.
- the three white emitters include a D65 white emitter, a D45 white emitter, and a D27 white emitter.
- the three white emitters include a D65 white emitter, a mid-Kelvin white emitter (e.g., D45), and a D27 white emitter.
- the mid-Kelvin white emitter includes a green bias.
- the green bias compensates for the slight magenta shift (e.g., when going from D25 to D65 with the straight line between the two points below the blackbody locus).
- Colors near the white locus and beyond are then a combination of the at least two white emitters (e.g., two white emitters, three white emitters).
- a majority of colors will have a white component that is broad band. Therefore, the resultant spectra of a mixture of color primaries and white primaries will also be broad band with an extent dependent on an amount of the at least one white primary.
- a higher broad band character of light results in fewer metameric problems. This is due to a white point being comprised of a combination of color primaries (e.g., RGB, CMY, RGBC, RGBCMY, etc.) in a non-white emitter system. Total luminance is then related to intensities of the color primaries (e.g., RGB, CMY, RGBC, RGBCMY, etc ).
- a white emitter is included, increased luminance can be achieved separate from the color primaries. Additionally, colors such as vibrantly colored pastels are attained by using the color primaries to “color shift” a bright white to the pastel. Alternatively, a fine balance of the color primaries is required, and small changes in a ratio of the color primaries will produce an unwanted color shift. Thus, a system with at least one white emitter is more tolerant to minor variations of intensity of the color primaries.
- the multi-primary system includes four primaries.
- the four primaries include a red primary, a green primary, a cyan primary, and a blue primary.
- the red primary has a dominant wavelength of 615nm
- the green primary has a dominant wavelength of 545nm
- the cyan primary has a dominant wavelength of 493nm
- the blue primary has a dominant wavelength of 465nm as shown in Table 1.
- the dominant wavelength is approximately (e.g., within ⁇ 10%) the value listed in the table below.
- the dominant wavelength is within ⁇ 5% of the value listed in the table below.
- the dominant wavelength is within ⁇ 2% of the value listed in the table below.
- FIG. 1 illustrates one embodiment of a four primary system including a red primary, a green primary, a cyan primary, and a blue primary.
- the example shown in FIG. 1 uses the values shown in Table 1.
- the four primaries include a red primary, a first green primary, a second green primary, and a blue primary.
- the red primary has a dominant wavelength of 615nm
- the first green primary has a dominant wavelength of 525nm
- the second green primary has a dominant wavelength of 550nm
- the blue primary has a dominant wavelength of 465nm as shown in Table 2.
- the dominant wavelength is approximately (e.g., within ⁇ 10%) the value listed in the table below.
- the dominant wavelength is within ⁇ 5% of the value listed in the table below.
- the dominant wavelength is within ⁇ 2% of the value listed in the table below.
- FIG. 2 illustrates one embodiment of a four primary system including a red primary, a first green primary, a second green primary, and a blue primary.
- the example shown in FIG. 2 uses the values shown in Table 2.
- the red primary has a dominant wavelength of 615nm
- the first green primary has a dominant wavelength of 520nm
- the second green primary has a dominant wavelength of 550nm
- the blue primary has a dominant wavelength of 465nm as shown in Table 3.
- the dominant wavelength is approximately (e.g., within ⁇ 10%) the value listed in the table below.
- the dominant wavelength is within ⁇ 5% of the value listed in the table below.
- the dominant wavelength is within ⁇ 2% of the value listed in the table below.
- FIG. 3 illustrates another embodiment of a four primary system including a red primary, a first green primary, a second green primary, and a blue primary.
- the example shown in FIG. 3 uses the values shown in Table 3.
- the multi-primary system includes five primaries.
- the five primaries include a red primary, a green primary, a cyan primary, a blue primary, and a white emitter.
- the white emitter is a D65 emitter.
- the red primary has a dominant wavelength of 615nm
- the green primary has a dominant wavelength of 545nm
- the cyan primary has a dominant wavelength of 493nm
- the blue primary has a dominant wavelength of 465nm as shown in Table 4.
- FIG. 4 illustrates one embodiment of a five primary system including a red primary, a green primary, a cyan primary, a blue primary, and a white emitter.
- the example shown in FIG. 4 uses the values shown in Table 4.
- the five primaries include a red primary, a yellow primary, a green primary, a cyan primary, and a blue primary.
- the red primary has a dominant wavelength of 615nm
- the yellow primary has a dominant wavelength of 570nm
- the green primary has a dominant wavelength of 545nm
- the cyan primary has a dominant wavelength of 493nm
- the blue primary has a dominant wavelength of 465nm as shown in Table 5.
- the dominant wavelength is approximately (e.g., within ⁇ 10%) the value listed in the table below.
- the dominant wavelength is within ⁇ 5% of the value listed in the table below.
- the dominant wavelength is within ⁇ 2% of the value listed in the table below.
- FIG. 5 illustrates another embodiment of a five primary system including a red primary, a yellow primary, a green primary, a cyan primary, and a blue primary.
- the example shown in FIG. 5 uses the values shown in Table 5.
- the five primaries include a red primary, a first green primary, a second green primary, a blue primary, and a white emitter.
- the white emitter is a D65 emitter.
- the red primary has a dominant wavelength of 615nm
- the first green primary has a dominant wavelength of 525nm
- the second green primary has a dominant wavelength of 550nm
- the blue primary has a dominant wavelength of 465nm as shown in Table 6.
- the dominant wavelength is approximately (e.g., within ⁇ 10%) the value listed in the table below.
- the dominant wavelength is within ⁇ 5% of the value listed in the table below.
- the dominant wavelength is within ⁇ 2% of the value listed in the table below.
- FIG. 6 illustrates another embodiment of a five primary system including a red primary, a first green primary, a second green primary, a blue primary, and a white emitter.
- the example shown in FIG. 6 uses the values shown in Table 6.
- the red primary has a dominant wavelength of 615nm
- the first green primary has a dominant wavelength of 520nm
- the second green primary has a dominant wavelength of 550nm
- the blue primary has a dominant wavelength of 465nm as shown in Table 7.
- the dominant wavelength is approximately (e.g., within ⁇ 10%) the value listed in the table below.
- the dominant wavelength is within ⁇ 5% of the value listed in the table below.
- the dominant wavelength is within ⁇ 2% of the value listed in the table below.
- FIG. 7 illustrates another embodiment of a five primary system including a red primary, a first green primary, a second green primary, a blue primary, and a white emitter.
- the example shown in FIG. 7 uses the values shown in Table 7.
- the multi-primary system includes six primaries.
- the six primaries include a red primary, a green primary, a blue primary, a cyan primary, a magenta primary, and a yellow primary.
- 6P-B is a color set that uses the same RGB values that are defined in the ITU-R BT.709-6 television standard. The gamut includes these RGB primary colors and then adds three more color primaries orthogonal to these based on the white point.
- the white point used in 6P-B is D65 (ISO 11664-2).
- the red primary has a dominant wavelength of 609nm
- the yellow primary has a dominant wavelength of 571nm
- the green primary has a dominant wavelength of 552nm
- the cyan primary has a dominant wavelength of 491nm
- the blue primary has a dominant wavelength of 465nm as shown in Table 8.
- the dominant wavelength is approximately (e.g., within ⁇ 10%) the value listed in the table below.
- the dominant wavelength is within ⁇ 5% of the value listed in the table below.
- the dominant wavelength is within ⁇ 2% of the value listed in the table below.
- FIG. 8 illustrates 6P-B compared to ITU-R BT.709-6.
- 6P-C [00181] 6P-C is based on the same RGB primaries defined in SMPTE RP431-2 projection recommendation. Each gamut includes these RGB primary colors and then adds three more color primaries orthogonal to these based on the white point.
- the white point used in 6P-B is D65 (ISO 11664-2).
- Two versions of 6P-C are used. One is optimized for a D60 white point (SMPTE ST2065-1), and the other is optimized for a D65 white point.
- the red primary has a dominant wavelength of 615nm
- the yellow primary has a dominant wavelength of 570nm
- the green primary has a dominant wavelength of 545nm
- the cyan primary has a dominant wavelength of 493nm
- the blue primary has a dominant wavelength of 465nm as shown in Table 9.
- the dominant wavelength is approximately (e.g., within ⁇ 10%) the value listed in the table below.
- the dominant wavelength is within ⁇ 5% of the value listed in the table below.
- the dominant wavelength is within ⁇ 2% of the value listed in the table below.
- FIG. 9 illustrates 6P-C compared to SMPTE RP431-2 for a D60 white point.
- the red primary has a dominant wavelength of 615nm
- the yellow primary has a dominant wavelength of 570nm
- the green primary has a dominant wavelength of 545nm
- the cyan primary has a dominant wavelength of 423nm
- the blue primary has a dominant wavelength of 465nm as shown in Table 10.
- the dominant wavelength is approximately (e.g., within ⁇ 10%) the value listed in the table below.
- the dominant wavelength is within ⁇ 5% of the value listed in the table below.
- the dominant wavelength is within ⁇ 2% of the value listed in the table below.
- FIG. 10 illustrates 6P-C compared to SMPTE RP431-2 for a D65 white point.
- ITU-R BT.2020 One of the advantages of ITU-R BT.2020 is that it can include all of the Pointer colors and that increasing primary saturation in a six-color primary design could also do this.
- Pointer is described in “The Gamut of Real Surface Colors, M.R. Pointer, Published in Colour Research and Application Volume #5, Issue #3 (1980), which is incorporated herein by reference in its entirety.
- 6P- C 6P gamut beyond SMPTE RP431-2
- the first problem is the requirement to narrow the spectrum of the extended primaries.
- the second problem is the complexity of designing a backwards compatible system using color primaries that are not related to current standards. But in some cases, there may be a need to extend the gamut beyond 6P-C and avoid these problems.
- the cyan color primary position is a location that limits maximum saturation.
- S6Pa Super 6Pa
- FIG.11 illustrates Super 6Pa compared to 6P-C.
- Table 11 is a table of values for Super 6Pa.
- x,y are described in ISO 11664-3:2012/CIE S 014 Part 3, which is incorporated herein by reference in its entirety.
- u’,v’ are described in ISO 11664-5:2016/CIE S 014 Part 5, which is incorporated herein by reference in its entirety.
- ⁇ defines each color primary as dominant color wavelength for RGB and complementary wavelengths CMY. [00191] TABLE 11 x y u’ v’ ⁇ is expanded on the same hue angle as 6P-C as shown in FIG.12. Advantageously, this makes backward compatibility less complicated. However, this requires much more saturation (i.e., narrower spectra).
- FIG.12 illustrates Super 6Pb compared to Super 6Pa and 6P-C.
- Table 12 is a table of values for Super 6Pb.
- the definition of x,y are described in ISO 11664-3:2012/CIE S 014 Part 3, which is incorporated herein by reference in its entirety.
- the definition of u’,v’ are described in ISO 11664-5:2016/CIE S 014 Part 5, which is incorporated herein by reference in its entirety.
- ⁇ defines each color primary as dominant color wavelength for RGB and complementary wavelengths CMY.
- the white emitter is a D65 white emitter.
- the red primary has a dominant wavelength of 615nm
- the yellow primary has a dominant wavelength of 570nm
- the green primary has a dominant wavelength of 545nm
- the cyan primary has a dominant wavelength of 493nm
- the blue primary has a dominant wavelength of 465nm as shown in Table 13.
- the dominant wavelength is approximately (e.g., within ⁇ 10%) the value listed in the table below.
- the dominant wavelength is within ⁇ 5% of the value listed in the table below.
- the dominant wavelength is within ⁇ 2% of the value listed in the table below.
- FIG. 13 illustrates one embodiment of a six primary system including a red primary, a yellow primary, a green primary, a cyan primary, a blue primary, and a white emitter.
- the example shown in FIG. 13 uses the values shown in Table 13.
- the six primaries include a red primary, a first green primary, a second green primary, a blue primary, a first white emitter, and a second white emitter.
- the first white emitter is a D65 white emitter.
- the second white emitter is a D25 white emitter.
- the red primary has a dominant wavelength of 615nm
- the first green primary has a dominant wavelength of 520nm
- the second green primary has a dominant wavelength of 550nm
- the blue primary has a dominant wavelength of 465nm as shown in Table 14.
- the first green primary has a dominant wavelength of 525nm.
- the dominant wavelength is approximately (e.g., within ⁇ 10%) the value listed in the table below.
- the dominant wavelength is within ⁇ 5% of the value listed in the table below.
- the dominant wavelength is within ⁇ 2% of the value listed in the table below.
- FIG. 14 illustrates one embodiment of a six primary system including a red primary, a first green primary, a second green primary, a blue primary, a first white emitter, and a second white emitter.
- the example shown in FIG. 14 uses the values shown in Table 14.
- the six primaries include a red primary, a green primary, a blue primary, a first white emitter, a second white emitter, and a third white emitter.
- the first white emitter is a D80 white emitter.
- the second white emitter is a D20 white emitter.
- the third white emitter is a D45 white emitter.
- the third white emitter includes a green bias (e.g., 40% green, 60% D45).
- the red primary has a dominant wavelength of 630nm
- the green primary has a dominant wavelength of 532nm
- the blue primary has a dominant wavelength of 467nm as shown in Table 15.
- the dominant wavelength is approximately (e.g., within ⁇ 10%) the value listed in the table below.
- the dominant wavelength is within ⁇ 5% of the value listed in the table below.
- the dominant wavelength is within ⁇ 2% of the value listed in the table below.
- FIG. 15 A illustrates one embodiment of a six primary system including a red primary, a green primary, a blue primary, a first white emitter, a second white emitter, and a third white emitter.
- the example shown in FIG. 15A uses the values shown in Table 15.
- this embodiment allows for fewer metameric errors.
- FIG. 15B illustrates an example of the emission spectra of a six primary system including a red primary, a green primary, a blue primary, a first white emitter, a second white emitter, and a third white emitter.
- the example shown in FIG. 15B uses the values shown in Table 15.
- the six primary system includes a first red primary, a second red primary, a first green primary, a second green primary, a first blue primary, and a second blue primary.
- the first red primary, the first green primary, and the first blue primary are preferably narrow band primaries.
- the second red primary, the second green primary, and the second blue primary are preferably wide band primaries.
- the first red primary has a dominant wavelength of 630nm
- the first green primary has a dominant wavelength of 532nm
- the first blue primary has a dominant wavelength of 467. lnm.
- the dominant wavelength is approximately (e.g., within ⁇ 10%) the value recited above.
- the dominant wavelength is within ⁇ 5% of the value recited above.
- the dominant wavelength is within ⁇ 2% of the value recited above.
- FIG. 15C illustrates an example of the emission spectra of a six primary system including a first red primary, a second red primary, a first green primary, a second green primary, a first blue primary, and a second blue primary.
- this embodiment also allows for fewer metameric errors.
- a matrix is created from XYZ values of each of the primaries (e.g., the at least four primaries, the at least five primaries, the at least six primaries). As the XYZ values of the primaries change, the matrix changes. Additional details about the matrix are described below.
- the present invention includes three different methods to format video for transport: System 1, System 2, and System 3.
- System 1 is comprised of an encode and decode system, which can be divided into base encoder and digitation, image data stacking, mapping into the standard data transport, readout, unstack, and finally image decoding.
- the basic method of this system is to combine opposing color primaries within the three standard transport channels and identify them by their code value.
- System 2 uses a sequential method where three color primaries are passed to the transport format as full bit level image data and inserted as normal. The three additional channels are delayed by one pixel and then placed into the transport instead of the first colors. This is useful in situations where quantizing artifacts may be critical to image performance.
- this system is comprised of the six primaries (e.g., RGB plus a method to delay the CYM colors for injection), image resolution identification to allow for pixel count synchronization, start of video identification, and RGB Delay.
- primaries e.g., RGB plus a method to delay the CYM colors for injection
- image resolution identification to allow for pixel count synchronization
- start of video identification e.g., start of video identification
- RGB Delay e.g., a method to delay the CYM colors for injection
- System 3 utilizes a dual link method where two wires are used.
- a first set of three channels e.g., RGB
- a second set of three channels e.g., CYM
- System 1, System 2, or System 3 can be used as described. If four color components are used, two of the channels are set to “0”. If five color components are used, one of the channels is set to “0”.
- this transportation method works for all primary systems described herein that include up to six color components.
- COMPARISON OF THREE SYSTEMS [00214]
- System 1 fits within legacy SDI, CTA, and Ethernet transports. Additionally, System 1 has zero latency processing for conversion to an RGB display. However, System 1 is limited to 11-bit words.
- System 2 is advantageously operable to transport 6 channels using 16-bit words with no compression.
- System 2 fits within newer SDI, CTA, and Ethernet transport formats.
- System 2 requires double bit rate speed.
- a 4K image requires a data rate for an 8K RGB image.
- System 3 is operable to transport up to 6 channels using 16-bit words with compression and at the same data required for a specific resolution.
- a data rate for an RGB image is the same as for a 6P image using System 3.
- System 3 requires a twin cable connection within the video system.
- NOMENCLATURE [00218]
- a standard video nomenclature is used to better describe each system.
- R describes red data as linear light.
- G describes green data as linear light.
- B describes blue data as linear light.
- C describes cyan data as linear light.
- M describes magenta data as linear light.
- Y c and/or Y describe yellow data as linear light.
- R’ describes red data as non-linear light.
- G’ describes green data as non-linear light.
- B’ describes blue data as non-linear light.
- C’ describes cyan data as non-linear light.
- M’ describes magenta data as non-linear light.
- Y c ’ and/or Y’ describe yellow data as non-linear light.
- Y6 describes the luminance sum of RGBCMY data.
- YRGB describes a System 2 encode that is the linear luminance sum of the RGB data.
- Y CMY describes a System 2 encode that is the linear luminance sum of the CMY data.
- C R describes the data value of red after subtracting linear image luminance.
- C B describes the data value of blue after subtracting linear image luminance.
- CC describes the data value of cyan after subtracting linear image luminance.
- CY describes the data value of yellow after subtracting linear image luminance.
- Y’RGB describes a System 2 encode that is the nonlinear luminance sum of the RGB data.
- Y’CMY describes a System 2 encode that is the nonlinear luminance sum of the CMY data.
- -Y describes the sum of RGB data subtracted from Y6.
- C’R describes the data value of red after subtracting nonlinear image luminance.
- C’B describes the data value of blue after subtracting nonlinear image luminance.
- C’C describes the data value of cyan after subtracting nonlinear image luminance.
- C’Y describes the data value of yellow after subtracting nonlinear image luminance.
- B+Y describes a System 1 encode that includes either blue or yellow data.
- G+M describes a System 1 encode that includes either green or magenta data.
- R+C describes a System 1 encode that includes either green or magenta data.
- C R +C C describes a System 1 encode that includes either color difference data.
- C B +C Y describes a System 1 encode that includes either color difference data.
- 4:4:4 describes full bandwidth sampling of a color in an RGB system.4:4:4:4:4 describes full sampling of a color in an RGBCMY system.4:2:2 describes an encode where a full bandwidth luminance channel (Y) is used to carry image detail and the remaining components are half sampled as a Cb Cr encode.4:2:2:2 describes an encode where a full bandwidth luminance channel (Y) is used to carry image detail and the remaining components are half sampled as a Cb Cr Cy Cc encode.4:2:0 describes a component system similar to 4:2:2, but where Cr and Cb samples alternate per line.4:2:0:2:0 describes a component system similar to 4:2:2, but where Cr, Cb, Cy, and Cc samples alternate per line.
- Constant luminance is the signal process where luminance ( ⁇ ) are calculated in linear light.
- Non-constant luminance is the signal process where luminance ( ⁇ ) are calculated in nonlinear light.
- Y 6 0.1063 R ' + 0.23195 Y c' + 0.3576G ' + 0.19685C ' + 0.0361B ' + 0.0712M '
- the multi-primary color system is compatible with legacy systems.
- a backwards compatible multi-primary color system is defined by a sampling method.
- the sampling method is 4:4:4.
- the sampling method is 4:2:2.
- the sampling method is 4:2:0.
- new encode and decode systems are divided into the steps of performing base encoding and digitization, image data stacking, mapping into the standard data transport, readout, unstacking, and image decoding (“System 1”).
- System 1 combines opposing color primaries within three standard transport channels and identifies them by their code value.
- the processes are analog processes.
- the processes are digital processes.
- the sampling method for a multi-primary color system is a 4:4:4 sampling method. Black and white bits are redefined. In one embodiment, putting black at midlevel within each data word allows the addition of CYM color data.
- FIG. 16 illustrates an embodiment of an encode and decode system for a multi primary color system.
- the multi-primary color encode and decode system is divided into a base encoder and digitation, image data stacking, mapping into the standard data transport, readout, unstack, and finally image decoding (“System 1”).
- System 1 image decoding
- the method of this system combines opposing color primaries within the three standard transport channels and identifies them by their code value.
- the encode and decode for a multi-primary color system are analog-based.
- the encode and decode for a multi-primary color system are digital-based.
- System 1 is designed to be compatible with lower bandwidth systems and allows a maximum of 11 bits per channel and is limited to sending only three channels of up to six primaries at a time. In one embodiment, it does this by using a stacking system where either the color channel or the complementary channel is decoded depending on the bit level of that one channel.
- FIG. 17 illustrates a sequential method where three color primaries are passed to the transport format as full bit level image data and inserted as normal (“System 2”).
- System 2 The three additional channels are delayed by one pixel and then placed into the transport instead of the first colors.
- This method is useful in situations where quantizing artifacts is critical to image performance.
- this system is comprised of six primaries (RGBCYM), a method to delay the CYM colors for injection, image resolution identification to all for pixel count synchronization, start of video identification, RGB delay, and for YCCCCC systems, logic to select the dominant color primary.
- RGBCYM six primaries
- the advantage of System 2 is that full bit level video can be transported, but at double the normal data rate.
- FIG. 18 illustrates one embodiment of a system encode and decode process using a dual link method (“System 3”).
- System 3 utilizes a dual link method where two wires are used.
- RGB is sent to link A and CYM is sent to link B. After arriving at the image destination, the two links are recombined.
- System 3 is simpler and more straight forward than Systems 1 and 2.
- the advantage with this system is that adoption is simply to format non-RGB primaries (e.g., CYM) on a second link. So, in one example, for an SDI design, RGB is sent on a standard SDI stream just as it is currently done. There is no modification to the transport and this link is operable to be sent to any RGB display requiring only the compensation for the luminance difference because the CYM components are not included. CYM data is transported in the same manner as RGB data. This data is then combined in the display to make up a 6P image.
- the downside is that the system requires two wires to move one image.
- This system is operable to work with most any format including SMPTE ST292, 424, 2082, and 2110. It also is operable to work with dual HDMI/CTA connections.
- the system includes at least one transfer function (e.g., OETF, EOTF).
- FIG. 19 illustrates one embodiment of an encoding process using a dual link method.
- FIG. 20 illustrates one embodiment of a decoding process using a dual link method.
- the system design minimizes limitations to use standard transfer functions for both encode and/or decode processes.
- Current practices used in standards include, but are not limited to, ITU-R BT.1886, ITU-R BT.2020, SMPTE ST274, SMPTE ST296, SMPTE ST2084, and ITU-R BT.2100. These standards are compatible with this system and require no modification.
- Encoding and decoding 6P images is formatted into several different configurations to adapt to image transport frequency limitations.
- the highest quality transport is obtained by keeping all components as RGBCMY components. This uses the highest sampling frequencies and requires the most signal bandwidth.
- An alternate method is to sum the image details in a luminance channel at full bandwidth and then send the color difference signals at half or quarter sampling (e.g., Y Cr Cb Cc Cy). This allows a similar image to pass through lower bandwidth transports.
- FIG. 21 illustrates one embodiment of a six-primary color system encode using a 4:4:4 sampling method.
- the RGBCYM video information is processed through a standard Optical Optical Transfer Function (OOTF).
- the RGBCYM video information is processed through a Transfer Function (TF) other than OETF or OOTF.
- TFs consist of two components, a Modulation Transfer Function (MTF) and a Phase Transfer Function (PTF).
- MTF Modulation Transfer Function
- PTF Phase Transfer Function
- the MTF is a measure of the ability of an optical system to transfer various levels of detail from object to image. In one embodiment, performance is measured in terms of contrast (degrees of gray), or of modulation, produced for a perfect source of that detail level.
- the PTF is a measure of the relative phase in the image(s) as a function of frequency.
- MTF is measured using discrete frequency generation.
- MTF is measured using continuous frequency generation.
- MTF is measured using image scanning.
- MTF is measured using waveform analysis.
- the six-primary color system is for a 12-bit serial system. Current practices normally set black at bit 0 and white at bit 4095 for 12-bit video. In order to package six colors into the existing three-serial streams, the bit defining black is moved to bit 2048. Thus, the new encode has RGB values starting at 2048 for black and bit 4095 for white and CYM values starting at bit 2047 for black and bit 0 as white. In another embodiment, the six-primary color system is for a 10-bit serial system.
- FIG. 22 illustrates one embodiment for a method to package six channels of primary information into the three standard primary channels used in current serial video standards by modifying bit numbers for a 12-bit SDI and a 10-bit SDI.
- FIG. 23 illustrates a simplified diagram estimating perceived viewer sensation as code values define each hue angle.
- Table 16 and Table 17 list bit assignments for computer, production, and broadcast for a 12-bit system and a 10-bit system, respectively.
- “Computer” refers to bit assignments compatible with CTA 861-G, November 2016, which is incorporated herein by reference in its entirety.
- “Production” and/or “Broadcast” refer to bit assignments compatible with SMPTE ST 2082-0 (2016), SMPTE ST 2082-1 (2015), SMPTE ST 2082-10 (2015), SMPTE ST 2082-11 (2016), SMPTE ST 2082-12 (2016), SMPTE ST 2110-10 (2017), SMPTE ST 2110-20 (2017), SMPTE ST 2110-21 (2017), SMPTE ST 2110- 30 (2017), SMPTE ST 2110-31 (2016), and/or SMPTE ST 2110-40 (2018), each of which is incorporated herein by reference in its entirety.
- the OETF process is defined in ITU-R BT.709-6, which is incorporated herein by reference in its entirety.
- the OETF process is defined in ITU-R BT.709-5, which is incorporated herein by reference in its entirety.
- the OETF process is defined in ITU-R BT.709-4, which is incorporated herein by reference in its entirety.
- the OETF process is defined in ITU-R BT.709-3, which is incorporated herein by reference in its entirety.
- the OETF process is defined in ITU-R BT.709-2, which is incorporated herein by reference in its entirety.
- the OETF process is defined in ITU- R BT.709-1, which is incorporated herein by reference in its entirety.
- the encoder is a non-constant luminance encoder. In another embodiment, the encoder is a constant luminance encoder.
- FIG. 24 illustrates one embodiment for a method of stacking/encoding six-primary color information using a 4:4:4 video system.
- Image data must be assembled according the serial system used. This is not a conversion process, but instead is a packing/stacking process.
- the packing/stacking process is for a six-primary color system using a 4:4:4 sampling method.
- FIG. 25 illustrates one embodiment for a method of unstacking/decoding six primary color information using a 4:4:4 video system.
- the RGB channels and the CYM channels are combined into one 12-bit word and sent to a standardized transport format.
- the standardized transport format is SMPTE ST424 SDI.
- the decode is for a non-constant luminance, six-primary color system.
- the decode is for a constant luminance, six-primary color system.
- an electronic optical transfer function (EOTF) (e.g., ITU- R BT.1886) coverts image data back to linear for display.
- the EOTF is defined in ITU-R BT.1886 (2011), which is incorporated herein by reference in its entirety.
- FIG. 26 illustrates one embodiment of a 4:4:4 decoder.
- System 2 uses sequential mapping to the standard transport format, so it includes a delay for the CYM data.
- the CYM data is recovered in the decoder by delaying the RGB data. Since there is no stacking process, the full bit level video can be transported. For displays that are using optical filtering, this RGB delay could be removed and the process of mapping image data to the correct filter could be eliminated by assuming this delay with placement of the optical filter and the use of sequential filter colors.
- Two methods can be used based on the type of optical filter used. Since this system is operating on a horizontal pixel sequence, some vertical compensation is required and pixels are rectangular. This can be either as a line double repeat using the same RGBCYM data to fill the following line as shown in FIG. 27, or could be separated as RGB on line one and CYM on line two as shown in FIG. 28.
- the format shown in FIG. 28 allows for square pixels, but the CMY components requires a line delay for synchronization. Other patterns eliminating the white subpixel are also compatible with the present invention.
- FIG. 29 illustrates an embodiment of the present invention for sending six primary colors to a standardized transport format using a 4:4:4 encoder according to System 2.
- Encoding is straight forward with a path for RGB sent directly to the transport format.
- RGB data is mapped to each even numbered data segment in the transport.
- CYM data is mapped to each odd numbered segment.
- Table 18, Table 19, Table 20, and Table 21 list 16-bit assignments, 12-bit assignments, 10-bit assignments, and 8-bit assignments, respectively.
- “Computer” refers to bit assignments compatible with CTA 861-G, November 2016, which is incorporated herein by reference in its entirety.
- “Production” and/or “Broadcast” refer to bit assignments compatible with SMPTE ST 2082-0 (2016), SMPTE ST 2082-1 (2015), SMPTE ST 2082-10 (2015), SMPTE ST 2082-11 (2016), SMPTE ST 2082-
- the decode adds a pixel delay to the RGB data to realign the channels to a common pixel timing.
- EOTF is applied and the output is sent to the next device in the system.
- Metadata based on the standardized transport format is used to identify the format and image resolution so that the unpacking from the transport can be synchronized.
- FIG. 30 shows one embodiment of a decoding with a pixel delay.
- the decoding is 4:4:4 decoding.
- the six primary color decoder is in the signal path, where 1 l-bit values for RGB are arranged above data level 2048, while CYM levels are arranged below data level 2047 as 11-bit. If the same data set is sent to a display and/or process that is not operable for six-primary color processing, the image data is assumed as black at 0 level as a full 12-bit word. Decoding begins by tapping image data prior to the unstacking process.
- the packing/stacking process is for a six-primary color system using a 4:2:2 sampling method.
- the standard method of converting from RGBCYM to a luminance and a set of color difference signals requires the addition of at least one new image designator.
- the encoding and/or decoding process is compatible with transport through SMPTE ST 292-0 (2011), SMPTE ST 292-1 (2011, 2012, and/or 2018), SMPTE ST 292-2 (2011), SMPTE ST 2022-1 (2007), SMPTE ST 2022-2 (2007), SMPTE ST 2022-3 (2010), SMPTE ST 2022-4 (2011), SMPTE ST 2022-5 (2012 and/or 2013), SMPTE ST 2022-6 (2012), SMPTE ST 2022-7 (2013), and/or and CTA 861-G (2106), each of which is incorporated herein by reference in its entirety.
- an electronic luminance component (Y) must be derived.
- the first component is: It can be described as:
- At least two new color components are disclosed. These are designated as Cc and Cy components.
- the at least two new color components include a method to compensate for luminance and enable the system to function with older Y Cb Cr infrastructures. In one embodiment, adjustments are made to Cb and Cr in a Y Cb Cr infrastructure since the related level of luminance is operable for division over more components.
- magenta is a sum of blue and red.
- magenta is resolved as a calculation, not as optical data.
- both the camera side and the monitor side of the system use magenta filters. In this case, if magenta were defined as a wavelength, it would not land at the point described. Instead, magenta would appear as a very deep blue which would include a narrow bandwidth primary, resulting in metameric issues from using narrow spectral components.
- magenta as an integer value is resolved using the following equation: [00282]
- the above equation assists in maintaining the fidelity of a magenta value while minimizing any metameric errors. This is advantageous over prior art, where magenta appears instead as a deep blue instead of the intended primary color value.
- the six-primary color system using a non-constant luminance encode for use with a 4:2:2 sampling method is compatible with transport through SMPTE ST 292-0 (2011), SMPTE ST 292-1 (2011, 2012, and/or 2018), SMPTE ST 292-2 (2011), SMPTE ST 2022-1 (2007), SMPTE ST 2022-2 (2007), SMPTE ST 2022-3 (2010), SMPTE ST 2022-4 (2011), SMPTE ST 2022-5 (2012 and/or 2013), SMPTE ST 2022-6 (2012), SMPTE ST 2022-7 (2013), and/or and CTA 861-G (2106), each of which is incorporated herein by reference in its entirety.
- FIG. 31 illustrates one embodiment of an encode process for 4:2:2 video for packaging five channels of information into the standard three- channel designs. For 4:2:2, a similar method to the 4:4:4 system is used to package five channels of information into the standard three-channel designs used in current serial video standards.
- FIG. 31 illustrates 12-bit SDI and 10-bit SDI encoding for a 4:2:2 system. Table 22 and Table 23 list bit assignments for a 12-bit and 10-bit system, respectively.
- “Computer” refers to bit assignments compatible with CTA 861-G, November 2016, which is incorporated herein by reference in its entirety.
- “Production” and/or “Broadcast” refer to bit assignments compatible with SMPTE ST 2082-0 (2016), SMPTE ST 2082-1 (2015), SMPTE ST 2082-10 (2015), SMPTE ST 2082-11 (2016), SMPTE ST 2082-12 (2016), SMPTE ST 2110-10 (2017), SMPTE ST 2110-20 (2017), SMPTE ST 2110-21 (2017), SMPTE ST 2110-30 (2017), SMPTE ST 2110-31 (2016), and/or SMPTE ST 2110-40 (2018), each of which is incorporated herein by reference in its entirety.
- FIG. 32 illustrates one embodiment for a non-constant luminance encoding process for a six-primary color system.
- the design of this process is similar to the designs used in current RGB systems.
- Input video is sent to the Optical Electronic Transfer Function (OETF) process and then to the encoder.
- OETF Optical Electronic Transfer Function
- the output of this encoder includes all of the image detail information. In one embodiment, all of the image detail information is output as a monochrome image.
- FIG. 33 illustrates one embodiment of a packaging process for a six-primary color system. These components are then sent to the packing/stacking process. Components are inverted so that bit 0 now defines peak luminance for the corresponding component. In one embodiment, this is the same packaging process performed with the 4:4:4 sampling method design, resulting in two 11-bit components combining into one 12-bit component.
- FIG. 34 illustrates a 4:2:2 unstack process for a six-primary color system.
- the image data is extracted from the serial format through the normal processes as defined by the serial data format standard.
- the serial data format standard uses a 4:2:2 sampling structure.
- the serial data format standard is SMPTE ST292. The color difference components are separated and formatted back to valid 11 -bit data. Components and are inverted so that bit 2047 defines peak color luminance.
- FIG. 35 illustrates one embodiment of a process to inversely quantize each individual color and pass the data through an electronic optical function transfer (EOTF) in a non-constant luminance system.
- EOTF electronic optical function transfer
- the individual color components, as well as . are inversely quantized and summed to breakout each individual color.
- Magenta is then calculated and is combined with these colors to resolve green.
- EOTF Electronic Optical Transfer Function
- the decoding is 4:2:2 decoding.
- This decode follows the same principles as the 4:4:4 decoder.
- a luminance channel is used instead of discrete color channels.
- image data is still taken prior to unstack from the channels.
- a 4:2:2 decoder a new component, called E_' Y . is used to subtract the luminance levels that are present from the CYM channels from the E C ' B-INT + E C ' Y-INT and E C ' R-INT + E C ' C-INT components.
- E_' Y a new component
- E_' Y is also sent to the G matrix to convert the luminance and color difference components to a green output.
- R’G’B’ is input to the EOTF process and output as GRGB , RRGB, and BRGB.
- the decoder is a legacy RGB decoder for non-constant luminance systems.
- the standard is SMPTE ST292.
- the standard is SMPTE RP431-2.
- the standard is ITU-R BT.2020.
- the standard is SMPTE RP431-1.
- the standard is ITU-R BT.1886.
- the standard is SMPTE ST274.
- the standard is SMPTE ST296. In another embodiment, the standard is SMPTE ST2084. In yet another embodiment, the standard is ITU-R BT.2100. In yet another embodiment, the standard is SMPTE ST424. In yet another embodiment, the standard is SMPTE ST425. In yet another embodiment, the standard is SMPTE ST2110.
- FIG. 36 illustrates one embodiment of a constant luminance encode for a sixprimary color system.
- FIG. 37 illustrates one embodiment of a constant luminance decode for a six-primary color system.
- the process for constant luminance encode and decode are very similar. The main difference being that the management of E Yf is linear.
- the encode and decode processes stack into the standard serial data streams in the same way as is present in a non-constant luminance, six-primary color system. In one embodiment, the stacker design is the same as with the non-constant luminance system.
- System 2 operation is using a sequential method of mapping to the standard transport instead of the method in System 1 where pixel data is combined to two color primaries in one data set as an 11-bit word.
- the advantage of System 1 is that there is no change to the standard transport.
- the advantage of System 2 is that full bit level video can be transported, but at double the normal data rate.
- YRGB and YCYM are used to define the luminance value for RGB as one group and CYM for the other.
- FIG. 38 illustrates one example of 4:2:2 non-constant luminance encoding. Because the RGB and CYM components are mapped at different time intervals, there is no requirement for a stacking process and data is fed directly to the transport format. The development of the separate color difference components is identical to System 1.
- the encoder for System 2 takes the formatted color components in the same way as System 1. Two matrices are used to build two luminance channels. YRGB contains the luminance value for the RGB color primaries. YCYM contains the luminance value for the CYM color primaries. A set of delays are used to sequence the proper channel for YRGB, YCMY, and the RBCY channels. Because the RGB and CYM components are mapped at different time intervals, there is no requirement for a stacking process, and data is fed directly to the transport format. The development of the separate color difference components is identical to System 1. The Encoder for System 2 takes the formatted color components in the same way as System 1.
- YRGB contains the luminance value for the RGB color primaries
- YCMY contains the luminance value for the CMY color primaries.
- This sequence YRGB, CR, and CC channels into the even segments of the standardized transport and YCMY, CB, and CY into the odd numbered segments. Since there is no combining color primary channels, full bit levels can be used limited only by the design of the standardized transport method.
- Timing for the sequence is calculated by the source format descriptor which then flags the start of video and sets the pixel timing.
- FIG. 39 illustrates one embodiment of a non-constant luminance decoding system.
- Decoding uses timing synchronization from the format descriptor and start of video flags that are included in the payload ID, SDP, or EDID tables. This starts the pixel clock for each horizontal line ot identify which set of components are routed to the proper part of the decoder. A pixel delay is used to realign the color primarily data of each subpixel.
- YRGB and YCMY are combined to assemble a new Y 6 component which is used to decode the CR, CB, CC, CY, and CM components into RGBCYM.
- the constant luminance system is not different from the non-constant luminance system in regard to operation. The difference is that the luminance calculation is done as a linear function instead of including the OOTF.
- FIG. 40 illustrates one embodiment of a 4:2:2 constant luminance encoding system.
- FIG. 41 illustrates one embodiment of a 4:2:2 constant luminance decoding system.
- the six-primary color system uses a 4:2:0 sampling system.
- the 4:2:0 format is widely used in H.262/MPEG-2, H.264/MPEG-4 Part 10 and VC-1 compression.
- the process defined in SMPTE RP2050-1 provides a direct method to convert from a 4:2:2 sample structure to a 4:2:0 structure.
- a 4:2:0 video decoder and encoder are connected via a 4:2:2 serial interface, the 4:2:0 data is decoded and converted to 4:2:2 by up-sampling the color difference component.
- the 4:2:2 video data is converted to 4:2:0 video data by down-sampling the color difference component.
- Several stages of codec concatenation are common through the processing chain.
- color difference signal mismatch between 4:2:0 video data input to 4:2:0 video encoder and 4:2:0 video output from 4:2:0 video decoder is accumulated and the degradation becomes visible.
- FIG. 42 illustrates one embodiment of a raster encoding diagram of sample placements for a six-primary color 4:2:0 progressive scan system.
- horizontal lines show the raster on a display matrix.
- Vertical lines depict drive columns. The intersection of these is a pixel calculation. Data around a particular pixel is used to calculate color and brightness of the subpixels.
- Each “X” shows placement timing of the sample. Red dots depict placement of the sample. Blue triangles show placement of the sample.
- the raster is an RGB raster. In another embodiment, the raster is a RGBCYM raster.
- SIX-PRIMARY COLOR SYSTEM BACKWARDS COMPATIBILITY By designing the color gamut within the saturation levels of standard formats and using inverse color primary positions, it is easy to resolve an RGB image with minimal processing.
- image data is split across three color channels in a transport system.
- the image data is read as six primary data.
- the image data is read as RGB data.
- the axis of modulation for each channel is considered as values describing two colors (e.g., blue and yellow) for a six-primary system or as a single color (e.g., blue) for an RGB system. This is based on where black is referenced.
- black is decoded at a mid-level value.
- RGB the same data stream is used, but black is referenced at bit zero, not a mid-level.
- the RGB values encoded in the 6P stream are based on ITU-R BT.709.
- the RGB values encoded are based on SMPTE RP431.
- these two embodiments require almost no processing to recover values for legacy display.
- the first is a preferred method that uses very limited processing, negating any issues with latency.
- the second is a more straightforward method using a set of matrices at the end of the signal path to conform the 6P image to RGB.
- the decoding is for a 4:4:4 system.
- the assumption of black places the correct data with each channel. If the 6P decoder is in the signal path, 11-bit values for RGB are arranged above data level 2048, while CYM level are arranged below data level 2047 as 11-bit. However, if this same data set is sent to a display or process that is does not understand 6P processing, then that image data is assumed as black at 0 level as a full 12-bit word.
- FIG. 43 illustrates one embodiment of the six-primary color unstack process in a 4:2:2 video system.
- Decoding starts by tapping image data prior to the unstacking process.
- the input to the 6P unstack will map as shown in FIG. 44.
- the output of the 6P decoder will map as shown in FIG. 45. This same data is sent uncorrected as the legacy RGB image data.
- the interpretation of the RGB decode will map as shown in FIG. 46.
- the decoding is for a 4:2:2 system.
- This decode uses the same principles as the 4:4:4 decoder, but because a luminance channel is used instead of discrete color channels, the processing is modified. Legacy image data is still taken prior to unstack from the E C ' B _, NT + E C ' Y _, NT and E C ' R _, NT + E c ' c _, NT channels as shown in FIG. 47.
- FIG. 48 illustrates one embodiment of a non-constant luminance decoder with a legacy process.
- the dotted box marked (1) shows the process where a new component called E_' yis used to subtract the luminance levels that are present from the CYM channels from the E C' B-INT + E C ' Y _ INT and E C ' R _, NT + E c ' c _ I NT components as shown in box (2).
- the resulting output is now the R and B image components of the EOTF process.
- E_' Y is also sent to the G matrix to convert the luminance and color difference components to a green output as shown in box (3).
- R’G’B ’ is input to the EOTF process and output as GRGB , RRGB, and BRGB.
- the decoder is a legacy RGB decoder for non-constant luminance systems.
- the six-primary color system outputs a legacy RGB image.
- FIG. 50 illustrates one embodiment of a legacy RGB image output at the end of the signal path.
- the design logic of the C, M, and Y primaries is in that they are substantially equal in saturation and placed at substantially inverted hue angles compared to R, G, and B primaries, respectively.
- substantially equal in saturation refers to a ⁇ 10% difference in saturation values for the C, M, and Y primaries in comparison to saturation values for the R, G, and B primaries, respectively.
- substantially equal in saturation covers additional percentage differences in saturation values falling within the ⁇ 10% difference range.
- substantially equal in saturation further covers a ⁇ 7.5% difference in saturation values for the C, M, and Y primaries in comparison to the saturation values for the R, G, and B primaries, respectively; a ⁇ 5% difference in saturation values for the C, M, and Y primaries in comparison to the saturation values for the R, G, and B primaries, respectively; a ⁇ 2% difference in saturation values for the C, M, and Y primaries in comparison to the saturation values for the R, G, and B primaries, respectively; a ⁇ l% difference in saturation values for the C, M, and Y primaries in comparison to the saturation values for the R, G, and B primaries, respectively; and/or a ⁇ 0.5% difference in saturation values for the C, M, and Y primaries in comparison to the saturation values for the R, G, and B primaries, respectively.
- the C, M, and Y primaries are equal in saturation to the R, G, and B primaries, respectively.
- the cyan primary is equal in saturation to the red primary
- the magenta primary is equal in saturation to the green primary
- the yellow primary is equal in saturation to the blue primary.
- the saturation values of the C, M, and Y primaries are not required to be substantially equal to their corollary primary saturation value among the R, G, and B primaries, but are substantially equal in saturation to a primary other than their corollary R, G, or B primary value.
- the C primary saturation value is not required to be substantially equal in saturation to the R primary saturation value, but rather is substantially equal in saturation to the G primary saturation value and/or the B primary saturation value.
- two different color saturations are used, wherein the two different color saturations are based on standardized gamuts already in use.
- substantially inverted hue angles refers to a ⁇ 10% angle range from an inverted hue angle (e.g., 180 degrees).
- substantially inverted hue angles cover additional percentage differences within the ⁇ 10% angle range from an inverted hue angle.
- substantially inverted hue angles further covers a ⁇ 7.5% angle range from an inverted hue angle, a ⁇ 5% angle range from an inverted hue angle, a ⁇ 2% angle range from an inverted hue angle, a ⁇ 1% angle range from an inverted hue angle, and/or a ⁇ 0.5% angle range from an inverted hue angle.
- the C, M, and Y primaries are placed at inverted hue angles (e.g., 180 degrees) compared to the R, G, and B primaries, respectively.
- the gamut is the ITU-R BT.709-6 gamut. In another embodiment, the gamut is the SMPTE RP431-2 gamut.
- the unstack process includes output as six, 11-bit color channels that are separated and delivered to a decoder.
- To convert an image from a six-primary color system to an RGB image at least two matrices are used.
- One matrix is a 3x3 matrix converting a six primary color system image to XYZ values.
- a second matrix is a 3x3 matrix for converting from XYZ to the proper RGB color space.
- XYZ values represent additive color space values, where XYZ matrices represent additive color space matrices.
- Additive color space refers to the concept of describing a color by stating the amounts of primaries that, when combined, create light of that color.
- each channel When a six-primary display is connected to the six-primary output, each channel will drive each color. When this same output is sent to an RGB display, the CYM channels are ignored and only the RGB channels are displayed. An element of operation is that both systems drive from the black area. At this point in the decoder, all are coded as bit 0 being black and bit 2047 being peak color luminance. This process can also be reversed in a situation where an RGB source can feed a six-primary display. The six-primary display would then have no information for the CYM channels and would display the input in a standard RGB gamut.
- FIG. 51 illustrates one embodiment of six-primary color output using a non-constant luminance decoder.
- FIG. 52 illustrates one embodiment of a legacy RGB process within a six-primary color system.
- the gamut is SMPTE RP431-2.
- the mapping for RGBCYM values for a SMPTE RP431-2 (6P-C) gamut are:
- RGB saturation values SR, SG, and SB.
- the results from the second operation are inverted and multiplied with the white point XYZ values.
- the color gamut used is an ITU-R BT.709-6 color gamut. The values calculate as:
- the color gamut is a SMPTE RP431-2 color gamut.
- the values calculate as:
- the matrices are as follows:
- the matrices are as follows:
- IC T C p is a color representation format specified in the Rec. ITU-R BT.2100 standard that is used as a part of the color image pipeline in video and digital photography systems for high dynamic range (HDR) and wide color gamut (WCG) imagery.
- the / (intensity) component is a luma component that represents the brightness of the video.
- C T and C P are blue-yellow (“tritanopia”) and red-green (“protanopia”) chroma components.
- the format is derived from an associated RGB color space by a coordination transformation that includes two matrix transformations and an intermediate non-linear transfer function, known as a gamma pre-correction.
- the transformation produces three signals: /, C T , andC p.
- the ITP transformation can be used with RGB signals derived from either the perceptual quantizer (PQ) or hybrid log-gamma (HLG) nonlinearity functions.
- PQ perceptual quantizer
- HGG hybrid log-gamma
- FIG. 53 illustrates one embodiment of packing six-primary color system image data into anIC T C p (ITP) format.
- RGB image data is converted to an XYZ matrix.
- the XYZ matrix is then converted to an LMS matrix.
- the LMS matrix is then sent to an optical electronic transfer function (OETF).
- OETF optical electronic transfer function
- FIG. 54 illustrates one embodiment of a six-primary color system converting RGBCYM image data into XYZ image data for an ITP format (e.g., 6P-B, 6P-C). For a six primary color system, this is modified by replacing the RGB to XYZ matrix with a process to convert RGBCYM to XYZ. This is the same method as described in the legacy RGB process.
- the new matrix is as follows for an ITU-R BT.709-6 (6P-B) color gamut:
- RGBCYM data based on an ITU-R BT.709-6 color gamut, is converted to an
- the resulting XYZ matrix is converted to an LMS matrix, which is sent to an OETF. Once processed by the OETF, the LMS matrix is converted to an ITP matrix.
- the resulting ITP matrix is as follows:
- the LMS matrix is sent to an Optical Optical Transfer Function (OOTF).
- the LMS matrix is sent to a Transfer Function other than OOTF or OETF.
- the RGBCYM data is based on the SMPTE ST431-2 (6P- C) color gamut.
- the matrices for an embodiment using the SMPTE ST431-2 color gamut are as follows:
- the resulting ITP matrix is:
- the decode process uses the standard ITP decode process, as the S R S G S B cannot be easily inverted. This makes it difficult to recover the six RGBCYM components from the ITP encode. Therefore, the display is operable to use the standard ICtCp decode process as described in the standards and is limited to just RGB output.
- the system is operable to convert image data incorporating five primary colors.
- the five primary colors include Red (R), Green (G), Blue (G), Cyan (C), and Yellow (Y), collectively referred to as RGBCY.
- the five primary colors include Red (R), Green (G), Blue (B), Cyan (C), and Magenta (M), collectively referred to as RGBCM.
- the five primary colors do not include Magenta (M).
- the five primary colors include Red (R), Green (G), Blue (B), Cyan (C), and Orange (O), collectively referred to as RGBCO.
- RGBCO primaries provide optimal spectral characteristics, transmittance characteristics, and makes use of a D65 white point. See, e.g., Moon-Cheol Kim et al, Wide Color Gamut Five Channel Multi-Primary for HDTV Application, Journal of Imaging Sci. & Tech. Vol. 49, No. 6, Nov./Dec. 2005, at 594- 604, which is hereby incorporated by reference in its entirety.
- F M. C
- F a tristimulus color vector
- F (X, Y,Z) T
- C a linear display control vector
- C (C1, C2, C3, C4, C5) T .
- a gamut volume is calculated for a set of given control vectors on the gamut boundary.
- the control vectors are converted into CIELAB uniform color space.
- the matrix inversion requires splitting the color gamut into a specified number of pyramids, with the base of each pyramid representing an outer surface and where the control vectors are calculated using linear equation for each given XYZ triplet present within each pyramid. By separating regions into pyramids, the conversion process is normalized.
- a decision tree is created in order to determine which set of primaries are best to define a specified color.
- a specified color is defined by multiple sets of primaries.
- the system of the present invention uses a combination of parallel processing for adjacent pyramids and at least one algorithm for verifying solutions by checking constraint conditions.
- the system uses a parallel computing algorithm.
- the system uses a sequential algorithm.
- the system uses a brightening image transformation algorithm.
- the system uses a darkening image transformation algorithm.
- the system uses an inverse sinusoidal contrast transformation algorithm.
- the system uses a hyperbolic tangent contrast transformation algorithm. In yet another embodiment, the system uses a sine contrast transformation execution times algorithm. In yet another embodiment, the system uses a linear feature extraction algorithm. In yet another embodiment, the system uses a JPEG2000 encoding algorithm. In yet another embodiment, the system uses a parallelized arithmetic algorithm. In yet another embodiment, the system uses an algorithm other than those previously mentioned. In yet another embodiment, the system uses any combination of the aforementioned algorithms.
- Each encode and/or decode system fits into existing video serial data streams that have already been established and standardized. This is key to industry acceptance. Encoder and/or decoder designs require little or no modification for a six-primary color system to map to these standard serial formats.
- FIG. 55 illustrates one embodiment of a six-primary color system mapping to a SMPTE ST424 standard serial format.
- the SMPTE ST424/ST425 set of standards allow very high sampling systems to be passed through a single cable. This is done by using alternating data streams, each containing different components of the image.
- image formats are limited to RGB due to the absence of a method to send a full bandwidth Y signal.
- mapping a six-primary color system to a SMPTE ST425 format is the same as mapping to a SMPTE ST424 format.
- To fit a six-primary color system into a SMPTE ST425/424 stream involves the following substitutions: G I ' NT + M' INT is placed in the Green data segments, R 1NT + C 1 ' NT is placed in the Red data segments, and B' INT + Y' INT is placed into the Blue data segments.
- FIG. 56 illustrates one embodiment of an SMPTE 424 6P readout.
- System 2 requires twice the data rate as System 1, so it is not compatible with SMPTE 424. However, it maps easily into SMPTE ST2082 using a similar mapping sequence. In one example, System 2 is used to have the same data speed defined for 8K imaging to show a 4K image.
- sub-image and data stream mapping occur as shown in SMPTE ST2082.
- An image is broken into four sub-images, and each sub-image is broken up into two data streams (e.g., sub-image 1 is broken up into data stream 1 and data stream 2).
- the data streams are put through a multiplexer and then sent to the interface as shown in FIG. 57.
- FIG. 58 and FIG. 59 illustrate serial digital interfaces for a six-primary color system using the SMPTE ST2082 standard.
- the six-primary color system data is RGBCYM data, which is mapped to the SMPTE ST2082 standard (FIG. 58). Data streams 1, 3, 5, and 7 follow the pattern shown for data stream 1. Data streams 2, 4, 6, and 8 follow the pattern shown for data stream 2.
- the six-primary color system data is Y RGB Y CYM C R C B C C C Y data, which is mapped to the SMPTE ST2082 standard (FIG. 59). Data streams 1, 3, 5, and 7 follow the pattern shown for data stream 1. Data streams 2, 4, 6, and 8 follow the pattern shown for data stream 2.
- the standard serial format is SMPTE ST292.
- SMPTE ST292 is an older standard than ST424 and is a single wire format for 1.5GB video, whereas ST424 is designed for up to 3GB video.
- ST292 can identify the payload ID of SMPTE ST352, it is constrained to only accepting an image identified by a hex value, Oh. All other values are ignored. Due to the bandwidth and identifications limitations in ST292, a component video six-primary color system incorporates a full bit level luminance component.
- E C ' b-INT + E cy-iNT is placed in the Cb data segments
- E C ' r-INT + E C ' c _, NT is placed in the Cr data segments.
- the standard serial format is SMPTE ST352.
- SMPTE ST292 and ST424 Serial Digital Interface (SDI) formats include payload identification (ID) metadata to help the receiving device identify the proper image parameters.
- ID payload identification
- the standard is the SMPTE ST352 standard.
- FIG. 60 illustrates one embodiment of an SMPTE ST2926P mapping.
- FIG. 61 illustrates one embodiment of an SMPTE ST2926P readout.
- FIG. 62 illustrates modifications to the SMPTE ST352 standards for a six-primary color system.
- Hex code “Bh” identifies a constant luminance source and flag “Fh” indicates the presence of a six-primary color system.
- Fh is used in combination with at least one other identifier located in byte 3.
- the Fh flag is set to 0 if the image data is formatted as System 1 and the Fh flag is set to 1 if the image data is formatted as System 2.
- the standard serial format is SMPTE ST2082. Where a six-primary color system requires more data, it may not always be compatible with SMPTE ST424. However, it maps easily into SMPTE ST2082 using the same mapping sequence.
- This usage would have the same data speed defined for 8K imaging in order to display a 4K image.
- the standard serial format is SMPTE ST2022. Mapping to ST2022 is similar to mapping to ST292 and ST242, but as an ETHERNET format.
- the output of the stacker is mapped to the media payload based on Real-time Transport Protocol (RTP) 3550, established by the Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF).
- RTP provides end- to-end network transport functions suitable for applications transmitting real-time data, including, but not limited to, audio, video, and/or simulation data, over multicast or unicast network services.
- the data transport is augmented by a control protocol (RTCP) to allow monitoring of the data delivery in a manner scalable to large multicast networks, and to provide control and identification functionality.
- RTCP control protocol
- FIG. 63 illustrates one embodiment of a modification for a six-primary color system using the SMPTE ST2202 standard.
- SMPTE ST2202-6:2012 HBRMT
- ST2022 relies on header information to correctly configure the media payload. Parameters for this are established within the payload header using the video source format fields including, but not limited to, MAP, FRAME, FRATE, and/or SAMPLE. MAP, FRAME, and FRATE remain as described in the standard.
- MAP is used to identify if the input is ST292 or ST425 (RGB or Y Cb Cr).
- SAMPLE is operable for modification to identify that the image is formatted as a six-primary color system image.
- the image data is sent using flag “Oh” (unknown/unspecified).
- the standard is SMPTE ST2110.
- SMPTE ST2110 is a relatively new standard and defines moving video through an Internet system. The standard is based on development from the IETF and is described under RFC3550. Image data is described through “pgroup” construction. Each pgroup consists of an integer number of octets.
- a sample definition is RGB or YCbCr and is described in metadata.
- the metadata format uses a Session Description Protocol (SDP) format.
- SDP Session Description Protocol
- pgroup construction is defined for 4:4:4, 4:2:2, and 4:2:0 sampling as 8- bit, 10-bit, 12-bit, and in some cases 16-bit and 16-bit floating point wording.
- six-primary color image data is limited to a 10-bit depth. In another embodiment, six-primary color image data is limited to a 12-bit depth. Where more than one sample is used, it is described as a set. For example, 4:4:4 sampling for blue, as anon-linear RGB set, is described as CO’B, Cl’B, C2’B, C3’B, and C4’B. The lowest number index being left most within the image. In another embodiment, the method of substitution is the same method used to map six-primary color content into the ST2110 standard.
- the standard is SMPTE ST2110.
- SMPTE ST2110-20 describes the construction for each pgroup.
- six-primary color system content arrives for mapping as non-linear data for the SMPTE ST2110 standard.
- six-primary color system content arrives for mapping as linear data for the SMPTE ST2110 standard.
- FIG. 64 illustrates a table of 4:4:4 sampling for a six-primary color system for a 10-bit video system. For 4:4:4 10-bit video, 15 octets are used and cover 4 pixels.
- FIG. 65 illustrates a table of 4:4:4 sampling for a six-primary color system for a 12-bit video system.
- 9 octets are used and cover 2 pixels before restarting the sequence.
- Non-linear GRBMYC image data would arrive as: , and B' INT + Y' INT Component substitution would follow what has been described for SMPTE ST424, where is placed in the Green data segments, is placed in the Red data segments, and the Blue data segments.
- the sequence described in the standard is shown as R0’, GO’, B0’, Rl’, Gl’, Bl’, etc.
- FIG. 66 illustrates sequence substitutions for 10-bit and 12-bit video in 4:2:2 sampling systems in a Y Cb Cr Cc Cy color space.
- Components are delivered to a 4:2:2 pgroup including, but not limited to, For 4:2:2 10-bit video, 5 octets are used and cover 2 pixels before restarting the sequence. For 4:2:2 12-bit video, 6 octets are used and cover 2 pixels before restarting the sequence.
- Component substitution follows what has been described for SMPTE ST292, where is placed in the Y data segments, is placed in the Cb data segments, and is placed in the Cr data segments.
- the sequence described in the standard is shown as CbO’, Y0’, CrO’, Y1’, Cr1’, Y3' Cb2' Y4’, Cr2' Y5' etc.
- the video data is represented at a bit level other than 10-bit or 12-bit.
- the sampling system is a sampling system other than 4:2:2.
- the standard is STMPE ST2110.
- FIG. 67 illustrates sample placements of six-primary system components for a 4:2:2 sampling system image. This follows the substitutions illustrated in FIG. 66, using a 4:2:2 sampling system.
- FIG. 68 illustrates sequence substitutions for 10-bit and 12-bit video in 4:2:0 sampling systems using a Y Cb Cr Cc Cy color space.
- Components are delivered to a pgroup including, but not limited to, , and For 4:2:0 10-bit video data, 15 octets are used and cover 8 pixels before restarting the sequence. For 4:2:0 12-bit video data, 9 octets are used and cover 4 pixels before restarting the sequence.
- Component substitution follows what is described in SMPTE ST292 where is placed in the Y data segments, T is placed in the Cb data segments, and T is placed in the Cr data segments. The sequence described in the standard is shown as Y00, Y’01, Y’, etc.
- FIG. 69 illustrates sample placements of six-primary system components for a 4:2:0 sampling system image. This follows the substitutions illustrated in FIG. 68, using a 4:2:0 sampling system.
- FIG. 70 illustrates modifications to SMPTE ST2110-20 for a 10-bit six-primary color system in 4:4:4 video. SMPTE ST2110-20 describes the construction of each “pgroup”. Normally, six-primary color system data and/or content would arrive for mapping as non- linear. However, with the present system there is no restriction on mapping data and/or content. For 4:4:4, 10-bit video, 15 octets are used and cover 4 pixels before restarting the sequence. Non-linear, six-primary color system image data would arrive as . The sequence described in the standard is shown as R0’, GO’, B0’, R1’, Gl’, Bl’, etc.
- FIG. 71 illustrates modifications to SMPTE ST2110-20 for a 12-bit six-primary color system in 4:4:4 video.
- 4:4:4 12-bit video, 9 octets are used and cover 2 pixels before restarting the sequence.
- Non-linear, six-primary color system image data would arrive as G i ' nt , B i ' nt . R i ' nt . M i nt , Y; nt . and Cj NT .
- the sequence described in the standard is shown as R0’, GO’, B0’, Rl’, Gl’, Bl’, etc.
- FIG. 72 illustrates modifications to SMPTE ST2110-20 for a 10-bit six primary color system in 4:2:2 video.
- Components that are delivered to a SMPTE ST2110 pgroup include, but are not limited to, , and EC' C-INT-
- 10-bit video 5 octets are used and cover 2 pixels before restarting the sequence.
- 12-bit video 6 octets are used and cover 2 pixels before restarting the sequence.
- Component substitution follows what is described for SMPTE ST292, where o r are placed in the Y data segments, or are placed in the Cr data segments, and E C ' b-INT or E C ' y-INT are placed in the Cb data segments.
- the sequence described in the standard is shown as Cb’0, Y’O, Cr’0, Y’l, Cb’l, Y’2, Cr’l, Y’3, Cb’2, Y’4, Cr’2, etc.
- FIG. 73 illustrates modifications to SMPTE ST2110-20 for a 12-bit six-primary color system in 4:2:0 video.
- Components that are delivered to a SMPTE ST2110 pgroup are the same as with the 4:2:2 method.
- For 4:2:0 10-bit video, 15 octets are used and cover 8 pixels before restarting the sequence.
- For 4:2:0 12-bit video, 9 octets are used and cover 4 pixels before restarting the sequence.
- Component substitution follows what is described for SMPTE ST292, where are placed in the Y data segments, or T are placed in the Cr data segments, and T are placed in the Cb data segments. The sequence described in the standard is shown as Y’OO, Y’01, Y’, etc.
- Table 24 summarizes mapping to SMPTE ST2110 for 4:2:2:2 and 4:2:0:2:0 sampling for System 1 and Table 25 summaries mapping to SMPTE ST2110 for 4:4:4:4:4 sampling (linear and non-linear) for System 1. [00382] TABLE 24
- Table 26 summarizes mapping to SMPTE ST2110 for 4:2:2:2 sampling for System 2 and Table 27 summaries mapping to SMPTE ST2110 for 4:4:4:4:4 sampling (linear and non-linear) for System 2.
- SDP is derived from IETF RFC 4566 which sets parameters including, but not limited to, bit depth and sampling parameters.
- SDP parameters are contained within the RTP payload.
- SDP parameters are contained within the media format and transport protocol. This payload information is transmitted as text. Therefore, modifications for the additional sampling identifiers requires the addition of new parameters for the sampling statement.
- SDP parameters include, but are not limited to, color channel data, image data, framerate data, a sampling standard, a flag indicator, an active picture size code, a timestamp, a clock frequency, a frame count, a scrambling indicator, and/or a video format indicator.
- the additional parameters include, but are not limited to, RGBCYM-4:4:4, YBRCY-4:2:2, and YBRCY- 4:2:0.
- the additional parameters include, but are not limited to, CLYBRCY-4:2:2 and CLYBRCY-4:2:0. [00389] Additionally, differentiation is included with the colorimetry identifier in one embodiment.
- 6PB1 defines 6P with a color gamut limited to ITU-R BT.709 formatted as System 1
- 6PB2 defines 6P with a color gamut limited to ITU-R BT.709 formatted as System 2
- 6PB3 defines 6P with a color gamut limited to ITU-R BT.709 formatted as System 3
- 6PC1 defines 6P with a color gamut limited to SMPTE RP 431-2 formatted as System 1
- 6PC2 defines 6P with a color gamut limited to SMPTE RP 431-2 formatted as System 2
- 6PC3 defines 6P with a color gamut limited to SMPTE RP 431-2 formatted as System 3
- 6PS1 defines 6P with a color gamut as Super 6P formatted as System 1
- 6PS2 defines 6P with a color gamut as Super 6P formatted as System 2
- 6PS3 defines 6P with a color gamut as Super 6P formatted as System 3.
- Colorimetry can also be defined between a six-primary color system using the ITU-R BT.709-6 standard and the SMPTE ST431-2 standard, or colorimetry can be left defined as is standard for the desired standard.
- the six-primary color system is integrated with a Consumer Technology Association (CTA) 861-based system.
- CTA-861 establishes protocols, requirements, and recommendations for the utilization of uncompressed digital interfaces by consumer electronics devices including, but not limited to, digital televisions (DTVs), digital cable, satellite or terrestrial set-top boxes (STBs), and related peripheral devices including, but not limited to, DVD players and/or recorders, and other related Sources or Sinks.
- DTVs digital televisions
- STBs satellite or terrestrial set-top boxes
- peripheral devices including, but not limited to, DVD players and/or recorders, and other related Sources or Sinks.
- TMDS transition- minimized differential signaling
- TMDS is a technology for transmitting high speed serial data and is used by the Digital Visual Interface (DVI) and High-Definition Multimedia Interface (HDMI) video interfaces, as well as other digital communication interfaces.
- TMDS is similar to low-voltage differential signaling (LVDS) in that it uses differential signaling to reduce electromagnetic interference (EMI), enabling faster signal transfers with increased accuracy.
- LVDS low-voltage differential signaling
- EMI electromagnetic interference
- TMDS uses a twisted pair for noise reduction, rather than a coaxial cable that is conventional for carrying video signals. Similar to LVDS, data is transmitted serially over the data link. When transmitting video data, and using HDMI, three TMDS twisted pairs are used to transfer video data.
- each pixel packet is limited to 8 bits only. For bit depths higher than 8 bits, fragmented packs are used. This arrangement is no different than is already described in the current CTA-861 standard.
- the system alters the AVI Infoframe Data to identify content.
- AVI Infoframe Data is shown in Table 10 of CTA 861-G.
- FIG. 74 illustrates the current RGB sampling structure for 4:4:4 sampling video data transmission.
- video data is sent through three TMDS line pairs.
- FIG. 75 illustrates a six-primary color sampling structure, RGBCYM, using System 1 for 4:4:4 sampling video data transmission.
- the six-primary color sampling structure complies with CTA 861-G, November 2016, Consumer Technology Association, which is incorporated herein by reference in its entirety.
- FIG. 76 illustrates an example of System 2 to RGBCYM 4:4:4 transmission.
- FIG. 77 illustrates current Y Cb Cr 4:2:2 sampling transmission as non-constant luminance.
- FIG. 78 illustrates a six-primary color system (System 1) using Y Cr Cb Cc Cy 4:2:2 sampling transmission as non-constant luminance.
- FIG. 79 illustrates an example of a System 2 to Y Cr Cb Cc Cy 4:2:2 Transmission as non-constant luminance.
- the Y Cr Cb Cc Cy 4:2:2 sampling transmission complies with CTA 861-G, November 2016, Consumer Technology Association.
- FIG. 80 illustrates current Y Cb Cr 4:2:0 sampling transmission.
- FIG. 81 illustrates a six-primary color system (System 1) using Y Cr Cb Cc Cy 4:2:0 sampling transmission.
- HDMI sampling systems include Extended Display Identification Data (EDID) metadata.
- EDID Extended Display Identification Data
- the EDID metadata describes the capabilities of a display device to a video source.
- the data format is defined by a standard published by the Video Electronics Standards Association (VESA).
- VESA Video Electronics Standards Association
- the EDID data structure includes, but is not limited to, manufacturer name and serial number, product type, phosphor or filter type, timings supported by the display, display size, luminance data, and/or pixel mapping data.
- the EDID data structure is modifiable and modification requires no additional hardware and/or tools.
- EDID information is transmitted between the source device and the display through a display data channel (DDC), which is a collection of digital communication protocols created by VESA.
- DDC display data channel
- EDID providing the display information
- DDC providing the link between the display and the source
- the two accompanying standards enable an information exchange between the display and source.
- VESA has assigned extensions for EDID.
- Such extensions include, but are not limited to, timing extensions (00), additional time data black (CEA EDID Timing Extension (02)), video timing block extensions (VTB-EXT (10)), EDID 2.0 extension (20), display information extension (DI-EXT (40)), localized string extension (LS-EXT (50)), microdisplay interface extension (MI-EXT (60)), display ID extension (70), display transfer characteristics data block (DTCDB (A7, AF, BF)), block map (F0), display device data block (DDDB (FF)), and/or extension defined by monitor manufacturer (FF).
- SDP parameters include data corresponding to a payload identification (ID) and/or EDID information.
- FIG. 82 illustrates a dual stack LCD projection system for a six-primary color system.
- the display is comprised of a dual stack of projectors. This display uses two projectors stacked on top of one another or placed side by side. Each projector is similar, with the only difference being the color filters in each unit. Refresh and pixel timings are synchronized, enabling a mechanical alignment between the two units so that each pixel overlays the same position between projector units.
- the two projectors are Liquid-Crystal Display (LCD) projectors.
- the two projectors are Digital Light Processing (DLP) projectors.
- the two projectors are Liquid-Crystal on Silicon (LCOS) projectors.
- the two projectors are Light-Emitting Diode (LED) projectors.
- the display is comprised of a single projector.
- a single projector six-primary color system requires the addition of a second cross block assembly for the additional colors.
- a single projector e.g., single LCD projector
- FIG. 83 One embodiment of a single projector (e.g., single LCD projector) is shown in FIG. 83.
- a single projector six-primary color system includes a cyan dichroic mirror, an orange dichroic mirror, a blue dichroic mirror, a red dichroic mirror, and two additional standard mirrors.
- the single projector six-primary color system includes at least six mirrors.
- the single projector six-primary color system includes at least two cross block assembly units.
- FIG. 84 illustrates a six-primary color system using a single projector and reciprocal mirrors.
- the display is comprised of a single projector unit working in combination with at first set of at least six reciprocal mirrors, a second set of at least six reciprocal mirrors, and at least six LCD units.
- Light from at least one light source emits towards the first set of at least six reciprocal mirrors.
- the first set of at least six reciprocal mirrors reflects light towards at least one of the at least six LCD units.
- the at least six LCD units include, but are not limited to, a Green LCD, a Yellow LCD, a Cyan, LCD, a Red LCD, a Magenta LCD, and/or a Blue LCD.
- Output from each of the at least six LCDs is received by the second set of at least six reciprocal mirrors.
- Output from the second set of at least six reciprocal mirrors is sent to the single projector unit.
- Image data output by the single projector unit is output as a six-primary color system.
- more than one projector is used.
- the display is comprised of a dual stack Digital Micromirror Device (DMD) projector system.
- FIG. 85 illustrates one embodiment of a dual stack DMD projector system. In this system, two projectors are stacked on top of one another.
- the dual stack DMD projector system uses a spinning wheel filter.
- the dual stack DMD projector system uses phosphor technology.
- the filter systems are illuminated by a xenon lamp.
- the filter system uses a blue laser illuminator system.
- Filter systems in one projector are RGB, while the second projector uses a CYM filter set.
- the wheels for each projector unit are synchronized using at least one of an input video sync or a projector to projector sync, and timed so that the inverted colors are output of each projector at the same time.
- the projectors are phosphor wheel systems.
- a yellow phosphor wheel spins in time with a DMD imager to output sequential RG.
- the second projector is designed the same, but uses a cyan phosphor wheel.
- the output from this projector becomes sequential BG.
- the output of both projectors is YRGGCB.
- Magenta is developed by synchronizing the yellow and cyan wheels to overlap the flashing DMD.
- the display is a single DMD projector solution.
- a single DMD device is coupled with an RGB diode light source system.
- the DMD projector uses LED diodes.
- the DMD projector includes CYM diodes.
- the DMD projector creates CYM primaries using a double flashing technique.
- FIG. 86 illustrates one embodiment of a single DMD projector solution.
- FIG. 87 illustrates one embodiment of a six-primary color system using a white OLED display.
- the display is a white OLED monitor. Current emissive monitor and/or television designs use a white emissive OLED array covered by a color filter. Changes to this type of display only require a change to pixel indexing and new six color primary filters. Different color filter arrays are used, placing each subpixel in a position that provides the least light restrictions, color accuracy, and off axis display.
- FIG. 88 illustrates one embodiment of an optical filter array for a white OLED display.
- FIG. 89 illustrates one embodiment of a matrix of an LCD drive for a six-primary color system with a backlight illuminated LCD monitor.
- the display is a backlight illuminated LCD display.
- the design of an LCD display involves adding the CYM subpixels. Drives for these subpixels are similar to the RGB matrix drives. With the advent of 8K LCD televisions, it is technically feasible to change the matrix drive and optical filter and have a 4K six-primary color TV.
- FIG. 90 illustrates one embodiment of an optical filter array for a six-primary color system with a backlight illuminated LCD monitor.
- the optical filter array includes the additional CYM subpixels.
- the display is a direct emissive assembled display.
- the design for a direct emissive assembled display includes a matrix of color emitters grouped as a six-color system. Individual channel inputs drive each Quantum Dot (QD) element illuminator and/or micro LED element.
- QD Quantum Dot
- FIG. 91 illustrates an array for a Quantum Dot (QD) display device.
- FIG. 92 illustrates one embodiment of an array for a six-primary color system for use with a direct emissive assembled display.
- FIG. 93 illustrates one embodiment of a six-primary color system in an emissive display that does not incorporate color filtered subpixels.
- this can be modified for a six-primary color system by expanding the RGB or WRGB filter arrangement to an RGBCYM matrix.
- the white subpixel could be removed as the luminance of the three additional primaries will replace it.
- SDI video is input through an SDI decoder.
- the SDI decoder outputs to a Y CrCbCcCy- RGBCYM converter.
- the converter outputs RGBCYM data, with the luminance component (Y) subtracted.
- RGBCYM data is then converted to RGB data.
- This RGB data is sent to a scale sync generation component, receives adjustments to image controls, contrast, brightness, chroma, and saturation, is sent to a color correction component, and output to the display panel as LVDS data.
- the SDI decoder outputs to an SDI Y-R switch component.
- the SDI Y-R switch component outputs RGBCYM data.
- the RGBCYM data is sent to a scale sync generation component, receives adjustments to image controls, contrast, brightness, chroma, and saturation, is sent to a color correction component, and output to a display panel as LVDS data.
- a conversion between XYZ and any three primary system yields an exact solution.
- any three primary system e.g., RGB
- a six primary system with an RGBCMY to XYZ is overdetermined.
- An algorithm is required to go from XYZ to RGBCMY.
- the system uses at least one triad in the algorithm.
- the system uses at least five primary triads.
- the at least five primary triads are formed using at least six primaries (e.g., Pi- P 6 ).
- the first triad is formed using P1, P2, and P3; the second triad is formed using P4, P5, and Pr,: the third triad is formed using P1, P3, and P5; the fourth triad is formed using P2, P3, and P4; and the fifth triad is formed using P1, P2, and P 6 .
- the first triad is formed using RGB
- the second triad is formed using CMY
- the third triad is formed using RMB
- the fourth triad is formed using CGB
- the fifth triad is formed using RGY.
- Alternate numbers of primaries, numbers of triads, and alternate triads are compatible with the present invention.
- a color value (e.g., ACES AP0) is converted to a colorimetric position (e.g., XYZ), and corresponding values for the at least five primary triads are calculated.
- the conversion process first converts an RGB value in ACES AP0 to XYZ with a D65 white point.
- Alternative white points are compatible with the present invention.
- a color value in ACES APO is converted to XYZ with a D65 white point.
- the conversion from ACES APO to XYZ with a D65 white point is performed using the following equation:
- a color value in ACES APO is converted to XYZ with a D60 white point.
- the conversion from ACES APO to XYZ with a D60 white point is performed using the following equation:
- a color value in ACES APO with a D60 white point is converted to ACES APO with a D65 white point. In one embodiment, the conversion from
- ACES APO with a D60 white point to ACES APO with a D65 white point is performed using a Bradford chromatic adaptation.
- D60 white point to ACES APO with a D65 white point is performed using the following equation:
- a color value in XYZ with a D60 white point is converted to XYZ with a D65 white point.
- the conversion from XYZ with a D60 white point to XYZ with a D65 white point is performed using a Bradford chromatic adaptation.
- the conversion from XYZ with a D60 white point to XYZ with a D65 white point is performed using the following equation: [00426]
- a color value in ACES AP0 is converted to XYZ with a D65 white point using a Bradford chromatic adaptation.
- ACES AP0 to XYZ with a D65 white point is performed using the following equation:
- the system uses equations found in RP 177 to generate a normalized set of values for color conversion matrices. "RP 177: 1993 - SMPTE
- RGB-to-XYZ matrix and a CMY-to-XYZ matrix are created using a white point (e.g., D65) of the system. In each of these triads, the white point is within the triad.
- the RGB-to-XYZ matrix determines what ratio of each normalized primary (R, G, and B) is required to achieve the D65 white with an RGB value of [1 1 1], and then scales the matrix such that the input of [1 1 1] yields the XYZ of D65.
- the CMY-to-XYZ matrix determines what ratio of each normalized primary (C, M, and Y) is required to achieve the D65 white with a CMY value of [1 1 1], and then scales the matrix such that the input of [1 1 1] yields the XYZ of D65.
- additional triad-to-XYZ matrices are created by using the columns in the RGB-to-XYZ matrix and the CMY-to-XYZ matrix.
- an RMB-to-XYZ matrix is created by taking the RGB-to-XYZ matrix and replacing the second column with the second column from the CMY-to-XYZ matrix.
- the D65 white point is not inside the triad, so in that case no combination of RMB can achieve the D65 color point.
- a hardware calibration is required to create the conversion matrices. For example, if a projector has 7 signals (e.g., RGBCMYW) for a six primary system, the output is measured as real XYZ for the individual primaries at maximum and for white when all six primaries are at maximum. A projector calibration is required to adjust the intensities of the primaries to achieve a white point (e.g., D65) from a [1 1 1 1 1 1] position. The matrices are then created as described above.
- signals e.g., RGBCMYW
- the output is measured as real XYZ for the individual primaries at maximum and for white when all six primaries are at maximum.
- a projector calibration is required to adjust the intensities of the primaries to achieve a white point (e.g., D65) from a [1 1 1 1 1 1] position.
- the matrices are then created as described above.
- a normalized matrix is used when a multi-primary display device is calibrated such that full power of all primaries yields the intended white point (e.g., D65). If the multi primary display device has primaries such that the result from all primaries being at full power gives a white point that is not the desired white point, then the non-normalized method is used and the calibration is done (e.g., via software, a look-up table (LUT)) to scale the primaries such that the full power values result in the desired white point.
- the LUT is a three-dimensional (3D) LUT.
- the system uses a non-normalized method to generate a set of values for the color conversion matrices.
- a set of six primaries Pi-Pr has a set of xyz primary values as shown in Table 28.
- this example shows a set of six primaries, this process is operable to be used with at least four primaries.
- an XYZ-to-P1P2P3 matrix is created using the inverse of the result from transposing a PiXYZ matrix created from the primary values in Table 28, a P 2 XYZ matrix created from the primary values in Table 28, and a P 3 XYZ matrix created from the primary values in Table 28.
- the conversion from XYZ color space to P 1 P 2 P 3 is shown below in the following equation:
- an XYZ-to-P4P5P6 matrix is created using the inverse of the result from transposing a P4xyz matrix created from the primary values in Table 28, a P5xyz matrix created from the primary values in Table 28, and a P 6 xyz matrix created from the primary values in Table 28.
- the conversion from XYZ color space to P4P5P6 is shown below in the following equation:
- This process is used to create additional matrices for alternative triads. As stated above, although this process is shown using six primaries, alternate numbers of primaries, numbers of triads, and alternate triads are compatible with the present invention.
- FIG. 94 illustrates one embodiment of a primary triad system for a multi-primary system including red, green, blue, cyan, magenta, and yellow primaries.
- the primary triad system includes an RGB triad, a CMY triad, an RMB triad, a CGB triad, and an RGY triad.
- RGBCMY Primary values for each color value
- an XYZ-to-RGB matrix is created using the inverse of the result from transposing an Rxyz matrix created from the primary values in Table 29, a Gxyz matrix created from the primary values in Table 29, and a Bxyz matrix created from the primary values in Table 29.
- an inverse is taken of the transpose of a matrix created using the first three rows of Table 29 for 6P-C. The conversion from D65 XYZ color space to RGB in a 6P-C system using a D65 white point is shown below in the following equation:
- an XYZ-to-CMY matrix is created using the inverse of the result from transposing a Cxyz matrix created from the primary values in Table 29, an Mxyz matrix created from the primary values in Table 29, and a Yxyz matrix created from the primary values in Table 29.
- the conversion from D65 XYZ color space to CMY in a 6P-C system using a D65 white point is shown below in the following equation:
- an XYZ-to-RMB matrix is created using the inverse of the result from transposing an Rxyz matrix created from the primary values in Table 29, an Mxyz matrix created from the primary values in Table 29, and a Bxyz matrix created from the primary values in Table 29.
- the conversion from D65 XYZ color space to RMB in a 6P-C system using a D65 white point is shown below in the following equation:
- an XYZ-to-CBG matrix is created using the inverse of the result from transposing a Cxyz matrix created from the primary values in Table 29, a Bxyz matrix created from the primary values in Table 29, and a Gxyz matrix created from the primary values in Table 29.
- the conversion from D65 XYZ color space to CBG in a 6P-C system using a D65 white point is shown below in the following equation:
- an XYZ-to-RGY matrix is created using the inverse of the result from transposing an Rxyz matrix created from the primary values in Table 29, a Gxyz matrix created from the primary values in Table 29, and a Yxyz matrix created from the primary values in Table 29.
- the conversion from D65 XYZ color space to RGY in a 6P-C system using a D65 white point is shown below in the following equation:
- the XYZ value is multiplied by each of the XYZ-to-triad matrices shown above (i.e., the XYZ-to-RGB matrix, the XYZ-to-CMY matrix, the XYZ-to-RMB matrix, the XYZ- to-CBG matrix, the XYZ-to-RGY matrix).
- the result of each multiplication is filtered for negative values. If a resulting matrix includes one or more negative values, all three values in the resulting matrix are set to zero. This results in a set of triad vectors.
- the primary components of the at least five primary triads are added together on a per-component basis (e.g., ⁇ SUM (R), SUM (B), SUM (G), SUM (C), SUM (M), SUM (Y) ⁇ ).
- the primary components are divided by a number of the at least two primary triads to create a set of final values. For example, if any of the merged colors are present in two triads (e.g., RGB and RMB), the values are divided by two (2) and merged back into the matrices, resulting in a set of final 6P values. If the merged colors are only present in one triad, this represents the set of final 6P values.
- the signal values for two triads are non-negative, the sums for each component are divided by two.
- the sums for each component are divided by two.
- RGB, CMY, RBM, CBG, and RGY it is not possible for more than two triads to be completely non-negative.
- with a different set of at least five triads it is possible for more than two triads to be completely non-negative.
- the result is output as an RGBCMY value.
- the color is out-of-gamut for the at least six primaries and must be mapped to an in-gamut color.
- signals from the triad with the least negative minimum value are used, with the negative signal values clipped to zero. These signal values are then used on a per-component basis for each out-of-gamut signal. After including all of the out-of-gamut signals, the signal values for each of the at least six primaries (e.g., RGBCMY) are clipped to one.
- the system includes a three-dimensional look up table that converts an out-of-gamut color value to an in-gamut color value for the at least six primary system.
- XYZ values for the out-of-gamut color value are converted to xy Y.
- the out-of-gamut color value is substituted to an in-gamut color value with a new xy and the original Y, thereby creating a new xy Y.
- the new xy Y is then transformed to XYZ. If any channel is greater than 1.0, the complete triad is divided by the maximum, scaling the channel to a maximum value of 1.0.
- the system maps the out-of-gamut color to an in gamut color by defining a vector using a white point and the out-of-gamut color and mapping the out-of-gamut color to a locus edge of the multi-primary system along the vector as shown in FIG. 95.
- Points inside the shape are white and represent points that do not need to be remapped.
- mapping along the straight line to the white point provides a more radially consistent and more operationally reasonable position.
- the system maps the out-of-gamut color value to the nearest in-gamut color regardless of a location of the white point (e.g., perpendicular reference) as shown in FIG. 96.
- the mapping is done in xy Y color space.
- the colorimetric xy values are mapped from the out-of-gamut color to the in-gamut color.
- the Y is carried along unchanged and merged with the new remapped x,y in-gamut color.
- the set of final 6P values is converted back to XYZ space with a D65 white point using a 6P-to-XYZ matrix.
- the conversion from 6P-to-XYZ for 6P-C is shown below in the following equation:
- the ISO 17321 matrix/chart values are defined using a perfect reflecting diffuser matrix (0.97784 0.97784 0.97784), an 18% grey card matrix (0.18 0.18 0.18), and the 24 patches of the ISO 17321-1 chart, as illuminated using CIE D60:
- 6P ⁇ 1,1, 1,1, 1,1 ⁇ converts to ACES-0 ⁇ 2,2,2 ⁇ .
- PQ Perceptual Quantizer
- the scaling is such that 6P data ⁇ 1,1, 1,1, 1,1 ⁇ maps to 10-bit PQ ⁇ 668,668,668 ⁇ .
- the scaling maps at a rate of 403 candelas per square meter (cd/m 2 ).
- the system uses at least eight primary triads.
- FIG. 98 illustrates one embodiment of a system with at least eight primary triads.
- the at least eight primary triads are formed using at least six primaries.
- a multi-primary system includes six primaries (e.g., P1-P6,) and eight primary triads.
- the first triad is formed using P1, P 2 , and P 3 ; the second triad is formed using P 4 , P 5 , and Pr,: the third triad is formed using P1, P 3 , and P 5 ; the fourth triad is formed using P 2 , P 3 , and P 4 ; the fifth triad is formed using P1, P 2 , and P6,: the sixth triad is formed using P 3 , P 4 , and P 5 ; the seventh triad is formed using P 2 , P 4 , and P6,: and the eighth triad is formed using Pi, P 5 , and P 6 .
- a first triad of a first set of triads e.g., P1P2P3, P1P2P5, P1P3P6, or P2P3P
- a second triad of a second set of triads e.g., P4P5P6, P2P4P5, P1P5P6, or P3P4P6
- a multi-primary system includes a red primary (R), a green primary (G), a blue primary (B), a cyan primary (C), a yellow primary (Y), and a magenta primary (M).
- any point is present in one of RGB, RGY, RMB, or CGB and in one of CMY, CGY, RMY, or CMB.
- the resulting values are added together and divided by two as shown in the equation below (e.g., for an XYZ input), wherein a point is present in only one triad in each set shown in brackets: [00455]
- the third triad, the fourth triad, and the fifth triad are formed by doing one replacement in the first triad
- the sixth triad, the seventh triad, and the eighth triad are formed by doing one replacement in the second triad.
- red replaces cyan
- blue replaces yellow
- green replaces magenta
- cyan replaces red
- yellow replaces blue
- magenta replaces green
- RGB is modified to RMB
- CMY is modified to RMY, CGY, and CMB.
- the primary triads are selected such that none of the primary triads include both a primary and its complement (e.g., no triad contains R and C, no triad contains B and Y, no triad contains G and M). Primary triads including both a primary and its complement are not needed for a full color description of the system.
- the primary triads are selected such that the first triad includes the white point, the second triad includes the white point, and no other triads include the white point.
- RGB includes the white point
- CMY includes the white point
- no other triads include the white point.
- Alternate numbers of primaries, alternate numbers of triads, and alternate triads are compatible with the present invention.
- this embodiment provides an easier method of calculating luminance because every color is included in two triads and a simple divide by two provides a final result while still describing the full gamut using the primary triads.
- Out-of-gamut colors are mapped to in-gamut colors as previously described.
- the XYZ-to-RGB matrix, the XYZ-to-CMY matrix, the XYZ-to-RMB matrix, the XYZ-to-CBG matrix, and the XYZ-to-RGY matrix are calculated as previously described. Additionally, in one embodiment, an XYZ-to-CMB matrix, an XYZ-to-RMY matrix, and an XYZ-to-CGY matrix are calculated as described below.
- an XYZ-to-CMB matrix is created using the inverse of the result from transposing a Cxyz matrix created from the primary values in Table 29, an Mxyz matrix created from the primary values in Table 29, and a Bxyz matrix created from the primary values in Table 29.
- the conversion from D65 XYZ color space to CMB in a 6P-C system using a D65 white point is shown below in the following equation:
- an XYZ-to-RMY matrix is created using the inverse of the result from transposing an Rxyz matrix created from the primary values in Table 29, an Mxyz matrix created from the primary values in Table 29, and a Yxyz matrix created from the primary values in Table 29.
- the conversion from D65 XYZ color space to RMY in a 6P-C system using a D65 white point is shown below in the following equation:
- an XYZ-to-CGY matrix is created using the inverse of the result from transposing a Cxyz matrix created from the primary values in Table 29, a Gxyz matrix created from the primary values in Table 29, and a Yxyz matrix created from the primary values in Table 29.
- the conversion from D65 XYZ color space to CGY in a 6P-C system using a D65 white point is shown below in the following equation:
- a set of matrices is defined for the at least eight triads based on the XYZ values of the at least six primaries in a multi-primary system. For each set of XYZ values (per pixel), the values for each of the at least eight triads are derived by multiplying the XYZ value by each triad inverse matrix. Each set of triad values is checked for negative values, and any triad with a negative value is set to (0, 0, 0). Like components from each triad are summed for each pixel and a set of values in the multi-primary system are created for each pixel. The sum is divided by a number of triads with non-negative values to compensate for luminance.
- the sum is the final value; if a point is found in one triad, the sum is divided by two to provide the final value; if a point is found in three triads, the sum is divided by three to provide the final value; if a point is found in four triads, the sum is divided by four to provide the final value; etc.
- FIG. 99 illustrates a flow chart of an embodiment of a system with eight triads in a six-primary system (i.e., RGBCMY).
- a multi-primary system includes four primaries (e.g., P 1 -P 4 ). Any point is included in a first triad of a first set of triads including P1P4 (e.g., P1P4P2 or P1P4P3) and a second triad of a second set of triads including P2P3 (e.g., P2P3P1 or P2P3P4).
- a multi-primary system includes a red primary (R), a green primary (G), a blue primary (B), and a cyan primary (C).
- a multi-primary system includes five primaries (e.g., P 1 -P 5 ).
- a multi- primary system includes a red primary (R), a green primary (G), a blue primary (B), a cyan primary (C), and a yellow primary (Y).
- R red primary
- G green primary
- B blue primary
- C cyan primary
- Y yellow primary
- Any point is present in one of RCY, RCB, or CGY and in one of RGY, RGB, or CGB.
- the resulting values are added together and divided by two as shown in the equation below (e.g., for an XYZ input), wherein a point is present in only one triad in each set shown in brackets:
- each color point resides within only two triads.
- points may be included in more than two triads of the total of 10 possible triads.
- no point is included in more than two triads. This is advantageous over a system that uses all possible triads (e.g., 10 for RGBCY) because it requires significantly less processing for calculations. Further, a simple divide by two is always required for calculations, which simplifies logic and reduces processing required to complete the calculations.
- the system uses at least one virtual primary in at least one triad.
- an RGBC system uses a virtual magenta primary and a virtual yellow primary.
- the virtual magenta primary is an average of a red primary point and a blue primary point.
- the virtual yellow primary is an average of a red primary point and a green primary point.
- an RGBY system uses a virtual magenta primary and a virtual cyan primary.
- the virtual cyan primary is an average of a green primary point and a blue primary point.
- an RGBCY system uses a virtual magenta primary.
- the at least one virtual primary is located on a line connecting two non-virtual primaries.
- using the virtual primaries allows for the eight triads described above (e.g., RGB, CMY, RBM, CBG, RGY, CMB, RMY, and CGY) to be used within a four primary system and/or a five primary system.
- eight triads described above e.g., RGB, CMY, RBM, CBG, RGY, CMB, RMY, and CGY
- the three points forming a triad include two primaries and a point within the color gamut used as a virtual primary.
- the virtual primary is a white point (e.g., D65).
- Each triad is formed using two adjacent primaries and the virtual primary (e.g., the white point).
- the triads include WRY, WYG, WGC, WCB, WBM, and WMR as shown in FIG. 100.
- using the white point as a virtual primary covers the complete color area, and points are only within one triangle.
- a four primary system with an additional virtual primary results in four triads
- a five primary system with an additional virtual primary results in five triads a six primary system with an additional virtual primary results in six triads
- a seven primary system with an additional virtual primary results in seven triads an eight primary system with an additional virtual primary results in eight triads
- a nine primary system with an additional virtual primary results in nine triads a ten primary system with an additional virtual primary results in ten triads
- an eleven primary system with an additional virtual primary results in eleven triads a twelve primary system with an additional virtual primary results in twelve triads, etc.
- the white point W is a virtual primary defined as [1 1 1 1 1 1] of RGBCMY. All color points are in only one of the six triads for a six primary system. If a color point is on the line between two triads, the system determines in which triad the color point resides (e.g., based on significant figures and precision of a processor).
- the W value decreases substantially.
- the addition of the virtual primary constrains the system to a finite number of values when converting from XYZ to a multi-primary color gamut (e.g., RGBCMY).
- the virtual primary is not necessary when converting from the multi -primary color gamut (e.g., RGBCMY) to XYZ because this operation is well-defined by a 3x6 matrix (e.g., RGBCMY-to-XYZ matrix) and an absolute inverse of the 3x6 matrix is not possible.
- the multi-primary system includes at least one internal primary (e.g., at least one white point) and at least three peripheral primaries.
- the multi-primary system includes P peripheral primaries and I internal primaries. There will be I sets of P triads formed from the P peripheral primaries and each of the I internal primaries. Any point will only be within one of the P triads including each of the I internal primaries. These resulting values are then averaged together.
- a multi-primary system includes three peripheral primaries (e.g., P 1 -P 3 ) and an internal primary (I). Any point is included in one triad of a set of triads including I (e.g., P 1 P 2 I, P 1 P 3 I, or P 2 P 3 I) and a triad formed with the three peripheral primaries (e.g., P 1 P 2 P 3 ). These resulting values from the one triad of the set of triads including I and the triad formed with the three peripheral primaries are added together and divided by two.
- I e.g., P 1 P 2 I, P 1 P 3 I, or P 2 P 3 I
- a multi-primary system includes a red primary (R), a green primary (G), a blue primary (B), and a white primary (W). Any point is present in one of RGW, RBW, or GBW and in RGB. In one embodiment, the resulting values are added together and divided by two as shown in the equation below (e.g., for an XYZ input), wherein a point is present in only one triad in each set shown in brackets:
- the value of RGW, RBW, or GBW is used without dividing by two to produce RGBW.
- a multi-primary system includes three peripheral primaries (e.g., P 1 -P 3 ) and two internal primaries (e.g., I 1 -I 2 ). Any point is included in a first triad of a first set of triads including Ii (e.g., P1P2I1, P1P3I1, or P2P3I1) and a second triad of a second set of triads including I2 (e.g., P1P2I2, P1P3I2, or P2P3I2).
- Ii e.g., P1P2I1, P1P3I1, or P2P3I1
- I2 e.g., P1P2I2, P1P3I2, or P2P3I2
- a multi-primary system includes a red primary (R), a green primary (G), a blue primary (B), a first white primary (Wi), and a second white primary (W 2 ).
- R red primary
- G green primary
- B blue primary
- Wi first white primary
- W 2 second white primary
- Any point is present in one of RGWi, RBWi, or GBWi and in one of RGW 2 , RBW 2 , or GBW 2 .
- the resulting values are added together and divided by two as shown in the equation below (e.g., for an XYZ input), wherein a point is present in only one triad in each set shown in brackets:
- a multi-primary system includes four peripheral primaries (e.g., P1-P4) and two internal primaries (e.g., I 1 -I 2 ). Any point is included in a first triad of a first set of triads including I 1 (e.g., P1P2I 1 , P2P4I 1 , P3P4I 1 , or P1P3I 1 ) and a second triad of a second set of triads including I2 (e.g., P1P2I2, P2P4I2, P3P4I2, or P1P3I2).
- I 1 e.g., P1P2I 1 , P2P4I 1 , P3P4I 1 , or P1P3I 1
- I2 e.g., P1P2I2, P2P4I2, P3P4I2, or P1P3I2
- a multi-primary system includes a red primary (R), a green primary (G), a blue primary (B), a cyan primary (C), a first white primary (Wi), and a second white primary (W2).
- R red primary
- G green primary
- B blue primary
- C cyan primary
- Wi first white primary
- W2 second white primary
- Any point is present in one of RGW 1 , GCW 1 , BCW 1 , or RBW 1 and in one of RGW 2 , GCW2, BCW 2 , or RBW 2 .
- the resulting values are added together and divided by two as shown in the equation below (e.g., for an XYZ input), wherein a point is present in only one triad in each set shown in brackets:
- a multi-primary system includes three peripheral primaries (e.g., P 1 -P 3 ) and three internal primaries (e.g., I 1 -I 3 ). Any point is included in a first triad of a first set of triads including Ii (e.g., P1P2I 1 , P1P3I 1 , or P2P3I 1 ), a second triad of a second set of triads including I2 (e.g., P1P2I2, P1P3I2, or P2P3I2), and a third triad of a third set of triads including I 3 (e.g., P1P2I3, P1P3I3, or P2P3I3).
- Ii e.g., P1P2I 1 , P1P3I 1 , or P2P3I 1
- I2 e.g., P1P2I2, P1P3I2, or P2P3I2
- a multi-primary system includes a first red primary (Ri), a second red primary (R 2 ), a first green primary (Gi), a second green primary (G 2 ), a first blue primary (Bi), and a second blue primary (B 2 ).
- the second red primary, the second green primary, and the second blue primary are contained within a triad formed by the first red primary, the first green primary, and the first blue primary.
- any point is present in one of R 1 G 1 R 2 , R 1 B 1 R 2 , or G 1 B 1 R 2 , in one of R 1 G 1 G 2 , R1B1G2, or G1B1G2, and in one of R1G1B2, R1B1B2, or G1B1B2.
- the resulting values are added together and divided by three as shown in the equation below (e.g., for an XYZ input), wherein a point is present in only one triad in each set shown in brackets:
- the multi-primary system includes the three peripheral primaries (e.g., P1-P3) and the three internal primaries (e.g., I1-I3). Any point is included in a first triad of a first set of triads (e.g., P1P2I1, P1I1I3, P2P3I2, P2I1I2, P1P3I3, P3I2I3, or I1I2I3) and a second triad (e.g., P 1 P 2 P 3 ). These resulting values from the first triad of the first set of triads and the second triad are added together and divided by two.
- P1-P3 the three peripheral primaries
- I1-I3 three internal primaries
- a multi-primary system includes a first red primary (Ri), a second red primary (R 2 ), a first green primary (Gi), a second green primary (G 2 ), a first blue primary (Bi), and a second blue primary (B 2 ).
- the second red primary, the second green primary, and the second blue primary are contained within a triad formed by the first red primary, the first green primary, and the first blue primary. Any point is present in one of R1G1R2, R1R2B2, G1B1G2, G1R2G2, R1B1B2, B1G2B2, or R2G2B2 and in R1G1B1.
- the resulting values are added together and divided by three as shown in the equation below (e.g., for an XYZ input), wherein a point is present in only one triad in each set shown in brackets:
- the present invention provides a system for displaying a multi-primary color system including a set of image data, an image data converter, a set of saturation data corresponding to the set of image data, wherein the set of saturation data is used to extend a set of hue angles for the first set of color channel data and the second set of color channel data, a set of Session Description Protocol (SDP) parameters, and at least one display device, wherein the at least one display device and the image data converter are in network communication, wherein the image data converter further includes a cyan primary position, and wherein the image data converter is operable to convert the set of image data for display on the at least one display device.
- SDP Session Description Protocol
- the set of image data includes a first set of color channel data and a second set of color channel data.
- the image data converter includes a digital interface, wherein the digital interface is operable to encode and decode the set of image data.
- the set of SDP parameters is modifiable.
- the system further includes at least one transfer function (TF) for processing the set of image data.
- the cyan primary position is positioned to limit saturation. In one embodiment, the cyan primary position is located at u-0.096, v -0.454. In one embodiment, the cyan primary position is determined by expanding the set of hue angles. In one embodiment, the cyan primary position is located at u-0.067, v -0.449.
- the set of image data includes a bit level.
- the image data converter is operable to convert the bit level of the set of image data, thereby creating an updated bit level.
- the set of SDP parameters is modified based on the conversion.
- the at least one display device is operable to display the multi-primary color system based on the set of image data.
- the system further includes at least one electronic luminance component, wherein the at least one electronic luminance component is not calculated within the at least one display.
- the first set of color channel data includes a first bit value defining black and a second bit value defining white
- the second set of color channel data includes a third bit value defining black and a fourth bit value defining white.
- the set of SDP parameters is modified to include data corresponding to the first set of color channel data and the second set of color channel data.
- the system further includes a magenta primary value.
- the magenta primary value is derived from the set of image data.
- the magenta primary value is not defined as a wavelength.
- the multi-primary color system is a six primary color system.
- the present invention provides a system for displaying a multi-primary color system including a set of image data, an image data converter, a set of saturation data corresponding to the set of image data, a set of Session Description Protocol (SDP) parameters, and at least one display device, wherein the at least one display device and the image data converter are in network communication, wherein the image data converter further includes a cyan primary position, wherein the cyan primary position is positioned to limit saturation, and wherein the image data converter is operable to convert the set of image data for display on the at least one display device.
- the image data converter includes a digital interface, wherein the digital interface is operable to encode and decode the set of image data.
- the set of image data includes a first set of color channel data and a second set of color channel data.
- the set of saturation data is used to extend a set of hue angles for the first set of color channel data and the second set of color channel data.
- the set of image data further includes a bit level.
- the system further includes at least one transfer function (TF) for processing the set of image data.
- the set of SDP parameters is modifiable.
- the image data converter is operable to convert the bit level of the set of image data, thereby creating an updated bit level.
- the cyan primary position is located at u-0.096, v -0.454.
- the set of SDP parameters is modified based on the conversion.
- the at least one display device is operable to display the multi-primary color system based on the set of image data.
- the multi-primary color system is a six-primary color system.
- the present invention provides a system for displaying a multi-primary color system including a set of image data, an image data converter, a set of saturation data corresponding to the set of image data, a set of Session Description Protocol (SDP) parameters, and at least one display device, wherein the at least one display device and the image data converter are in network communication, wherein the image data converter further includes a cyan primary position, wherein the cyan primary position is determined by expanding the set of hue angles, and wherein the image data converter is operable to convert the set of image data for display on the at least one display device.
- the image data converter includes a digital interface, wherein the digital interface is operable to encode and decode the set of image data.
- the set of image data includes a first set of color channel data and a second set of color channel data.
- the set of saturation data is used to extend a set of hue angles for the first set of color channel data and the second set of color channel data.
- the present invention provides a system for displaying a multi-primary color system including a set of image data, wherein the set of image data includes a first set of color channel data and a second set of color channel data, an image data converter, wherein the image data converter includes a digital interface, wherein the digital interface is operable to encode and decode the set of image data, a set of Session Description Protocol (SDP) parameters, and at least one display device, wherein the at least one display device and the image data converter are in network communication, wherein the image data converter is operable to map the first set of color channel data and the second set of color channel data to a color matrix, wherein the color matrix includes primary color values for Red (R), Green (G), Blue (B), Cyan (C), Yellow (Y), and Magenta (M), wherein the C, M, and Y primary color values are substantially equal in saturation to the R, G, and B primary color values, respectively, and wherein the image data converter is operable to convert the set of image
- the system further includes at least one transfer function (TF) for processing the set of image data.
- TF transfer function
- the set of SDP parameters is modifiable.
- the C, M, and Y primary color values include a set of substantially inverted hue angles corresponding to a set of hue angles for the R, G, and B primary color values, respectively.
- the specified color space uses an ITU-R BT709.6 color gamut.
- the set of image data includes a bit level, wherein the image data converter is operable to convert the bit level of the set of image data, thereby creating an updated bit level.
- the set of SDP parameters is modified based on the conversion.
- the at least one display device is operable to display the multi-primary color system based on the set of image data.
- the system further includes at least one electronic luminance component, wherein the at least one electronic luminance component is not calculated within the at least one display device.
- the additive color space matrix is based on mathematical space and not based on the set of image data.
- the set of SDP parameters is modified to include data corresponding to the first set of color channel data and the second set of color channel data.
- the multi-primary color system is a six-primary color system.
- the present invention provides a system for displaying a multi-primary color system includes a set of image data, wherein the set of image data includes a first set of color channel data and a second set of color channel data, an image data converter, a set of Session Description Protocol (SDP) parameters, and at least one display device, wherein the at least one display device and the image data converter are in network communication, wherein the image data converter is operable to map the first set of color channel data and the second set of color channel data to a color matrix, wherein the color matrix includes primary color values for Red (R), Green (G), Blue (B), Cyan (C), Yellow (Y), and Magenta (M), and wherein the image data converter is operable to convert the set of image data for display on the at least one display device using the color matrix and an additive color space matrix corresponding to a specified color space.
- SDP Session Description Protocol
- the set of SDP parameters is modifiable.
- the C, M, and Y primary color values are substantially equal in saturation to the R, G, and B primary color values, respectively.
- the specified color space uses an ITU-R BT709.6 color gamut.
- the first set of color channel data defines a first minimum color luminance and a first maximum color luminance, wherein the second set of color channel data defines a second minimum color luminance and a second maximum color luminance.
- the set of SDP parameters indicates the magenta primary value and the set of image data being displayed on the at least one display device is using the multi-primary color system.
- the image data converter is operable to convert a bit level for the set of image data to a new bit level.
- the system further includes a set of saturation data corresponding to the set of image data, wherein the set of saturation data is used to extend a set of hue angles for the first set of color channel data and the second set of color channel data.
- the set of SDP parameters includes the first set of color channel data, the second set of color channel data, mapping data for the set of image data, and a flag indicator.
- the image data converter includes a digital interface, and wherein the digital interface is operable to encode and decode the set of image data using at least one color difference component.
- the at least one display device is operable to display the multi-primary color system based on the set of image data, wherein the multi-primary color system displayed on the at least one display device is based on the set of image data, such that the set of SDP parameters indicates the M primary color value and that the set of image data being displayed on the at least one display device is using the multi-primary color system.
- the set of image data includes a bit level, wherein the image data converter is operable to convert the bit level for the set of image data to a new bit level using the at least one TF.
- the set of image data defines a minimum color luminance and a maximum color luminance.
- the digital interface includes payload identification (ID) metadata, wherein the payload ID metadata is operable to identify the set of image data as a multi-primary color set of image data.
- the M primary color value is calculated based on values for R and B from the set of image data.
- the multi-primary color system is a six-primary color system.
- the present invention provides a system for displaying a set of image data using a multi-primary color system including a set of image data, a Magenta (M) primary value, an image data converter, a set of Session Description Protocol (SDP) parameters, at least one display device, wherein the at least one display device and the image data converter are in network communication, wherein the image data converter is operable to map the set of image data to a color matrix, wherein the color matrix includes primary values for Red (R), Green (G), Blue (B), Cyan (C), and Yellow (Y), wherein the color matrix further includes the M primary value, wherein the C, M, and the Y primary color values include a set of substantially inverted hue angles corresponding to a set of hue angles for the R, G, and B primary color values, respectively, wherein the image data converter is operable to convert the set of image data for display on the at least one display device using the color matrix and an additive color space matrix corresponding to a specified color space.
- M Magenta
- SDP
- the image data converter includes a digital interface.
- the digital interface is operable to encode and decode the set of image data.
- the system further includes at least one transfer function (TF) for processing the set of image data.
- TF transfer function
- the set of SDP parameters is modifiable.
- the specified color space uses an ITU-R BT709.6 color gamut.
- the multi-primary color system is a six-primary color system.
- the present invention provides a system for displaying a primary color system including a set of image data, an image data converter, a set of Session Description Protocol (SDP) parameters, and at least one display device, wherein the set of image data further includes primary color data for at least five primary color values, wherein the at least one display device and the image data converter are in network communication, and wherein the image data converter is operable to convert the set of image data for display on the at least one display device.
- the set of image data includes a first set of color channel data and a second set of color channel data.
- the image data converter includes a digital interface, wherein the digital interface is operable to encode and decode the set of image data.
- the system further includes at least one transfer function (TF) for processing the set of image data.
- the set of image data includes a bit level, wherein the image data converter is operable to convert the bit level of the set of image data, thereby creating an updated bit level.
- the set of SDP parameters is modifiable.
- the at least one display device is operable to display the primary color system based on the set of image data.
- the system further includes at least one electronic luminance component, wherein the at least one electronic luminance component is not calculated within the at least one display.
- the first set of color channel data includes a first bit value defining black and a second bit value defining white
- the second set of color channel data includes a third bit value defining black and a fourth bit value defining white
- the set of SDP parameters is modified to include data corresponding to the first set of color channel data and the second set of color channel data.
- the primary color values are operable to be expressed using a tristimulus color vector, a linear display control vector, and a conversion matrix.
- the present invention provides a system for displaying a primary color system including a set of image data, wherein the set of image data includes a first set of color channel data and a second set of color channel data, an image data converter, a set of Session Description Protocol (SDP) parameters, wherein the set of SDP parameters is modifiable, and at least one display device, wherein the set of image data further includes primary color data for at least five primary color values, wherein the at least one display device and the image data converter are in network communication, and wherein the image data converter is operable to convert the set of image data for display on the at least one display device.
- SDP Session Description Protocol
- the system further includes a standardized transport format, wherein the standardized transport format is operable to receive the first set of color channel data and the second set of color channel data as a combined set of color channel data, wherein the combined set of color channel data has a combined bit level equal to the bit level for the set of image data.
- the set of SDP parameters indicate the set of image data being displayed on the at least one display device is using the primary color system.
- the image data converter is operable to convert a bit level for the set of image data to a new bit level.
- the system further includes a set of saturation data corresponding to the set of image data, wherein the set of saturation data is used to extend a set of hue angles for the first set of color channel data and the second set of color channel data.
- the set of SDP parameters includes the first set of color channel data, the second set of color channel data, mapping data for the set of image data, and a flag indicator.
- the image data converter includes a digital interface, and wherein the digital interface is operable to encode and decode the set of image data using at least one color difference component.
- the present invention provides a system for displaying a set of image data using a primary color system including a set of image data, an image data converter, a set of Session Description Protocol (SDP) parameters, and at least one display device, wherein the set of image data further includes primary color data for at least five primary color values, wherein the at least one display device and the image data converter are in network communication, and wherein the image data converter is operable to convert the set of image data for display on the at least one display device.
- SDP Session Description Protocol
- the at least one display device is operable to display the primary color system based on the set of image data, wherein the primary color system displayed on the at least one display device is based on the set of image data, such that the set of SDP parameters indicates that the set of image data being displayed on the at least one display device is using the primary color system.
- the image data converter includes a digital interface, wherein the digital interface is operable to encode and decode the set of image data.
- the system further includes at least one transfer function (TF) for processing the set of image data.
- the set of SDP parameters is modifiable.
- the set of image data includes a bit level, wherein the image data converter is operable to convert the bit level for the set of image data to a new bit level using the at least one TF.
- the set of image data defines a minimum color luminance and a maximum color luminance.
- the set of image data includes red (R), green (G), blue (B), cyan (C), and yellow (Y) primary color values.
- the digital interface includes payload identification (ID) metadata, wherein the payload ID metadata is operable to identify the set of image data as a primary color set of image data.
- the present invention provides a system for displaying a primary color system including a set of image data, wherein the set of image data includes a bit level, an image data converter, wherein the image data converter includes a digital interface, wherein the digital interface is operable to encode and decode the set of image data, a set of Session Description Protocol (SDP) parameters, wherein the set of SDP parameters is modifiable, and at least one display device, wherein the set of image data further includes primary color data for at least four primary color values, wherein the at least one display device and the image data converter are in network communication, wherein the image data converter is operable to convert the bit level for the set of image data, thereby creating an updated bit level, wherein the image data converter is operable to convert the set of image data for display on the at least one display device, wherein once the set of image data has been converted by the image data converter for the at least one display device, the set of SDP parameters is modified based on the conversion, and wherein the at least one
- SDP Session Description
- the at least one display device is a single display device.
- the at least four primary color values are operable to be expressed using a tristimulus color vector, a linear display control vector, and a conversion matrix.
- the digital interface encodes and decodes the set of image data using at least one color difference component, wherein the at least one color difference component is operable for up-sampling and/or down-sampling.
- the present invention provides a system for displaying a primary color system including a set of image data, wherein the set of image data includes a bit level, an image data converter, wherein the image data converter includes a digital interface, wherein the digital interface is operable to encode and decode the set of image data, at least one transfer function (TF) for processing the set of image data, a set of Session Description Protocol (SDP) parameters, wherein the set of SDP parameters is modifiable, and at least one display device, wherein the set of image data further includes primary color data for at least four primary color values, wherein the at least four primary color values include a cyan primary, wherein the at least one display device and the image data converter are in network communication, wherein the image data converter is operable to convert the bit level for the set of image data, thereby creating an updated bit level, wherein the image data converter is operable to convert the set of image data for display on the at least one display device, wherein once the set of image data has been converted by the
- the present invention provides a system for displaying a primary color system, including a set of image data, wherein the set of image data includes a bit level, an image data converter, wherein the image data converter includes a digital interface, wherein the digital interface is operable to encode and decode the set of image data, at least one transfer function (TF) for processing the set of image data, a set of Session Description Protocol (SDP) parameters, wherein the set of SDP parameters is modifiable, and at least one display device, wherein the set of image data further includes primary color data for at least four primary color values, wherein the at least four primary color values include at least one white emitter, wherein the at least one display device and the image data converter are in network communication, wherein the image data converter is operable to convert the bit level for the set of image data, thereby creating an updated bit level, wherein the image data converter is operable to convert the set of image data for display on the at least one display device.
- TF transfer function
- SDP Session Description Protocol
- the set of SDP parameters is modified based on the conversion, and wherein the at least one display device is operable to display the primary color system based on the set of image data, and wherein the set of SDP parameters indicates that the image data being displayed on the at least one display device is using the primary color system.
- the present invention provides a system for color conversion in a multi-primary color system including a color signal corresponding to XYZ coordinates of a color, at least four primaries, at least four triads, wherein each of the at least four triads includes three of the at least four primaries, at least four XYZ-to-triad matrices, wherein each of the at least four XYZ-to-triad matrices corresponds to one of the at least four triads, and at least one display device, wherein the XYZ coordinates are multiplied by the at least four XYZ-to-triad matrices to determine one or more of the at least four triads in which the XYZ coordinates are located, wherein a sum of primary components of the one or more of the at least four triads is determined on a per-component basis, wherein the sum is divided by a number of the one or more of the at least four triad
- the at least four primaries are at least five primaries, wherein the at least five primaries include at least four color primaries and a white point, and wherein the at least four triads each include two adjacent color primaries of the at least four color primaries and the white point.
- each of the at least four triads does not contain a primary and its complement.
- the at least four primaries include red (R), green (G), blue (B), cyan (C), magenta (M), and yellow (Y), wherein the at least four triads are eight triads, and wherein the eight triads include RGB, CMY, RBM, CGB, RGY, CMB, RMY, and CGY.
- the at least four primaries include red (R), green (G), blue (B), cyan (C), magenta (M), and yellow (Y), wherein the at least four triads are five triads, and wherein the five triads include RGB, CMY, RBM, CGB, and RGY. In one embodiment, the at least four primaries include red (R), green (G), blue (B), cyan (C), and yellow (Y), wherein the at least four triads are six triads, and wherein the six triads include RGB, RGY, CGB, RCB, CGY, and CRY.
- the one or more of the at least four triads is not more than two of the at least four triads.
- the color is an out-of-gamut color and remapped to an in-gamut color along a straight line between the out- of-gamut color and a white point.
- all values in a resulting matrix from the multiplication of the XYZ coordinates and the at least four XYZ-to-triad matrices are set to zero if any value in the resulting matrix is negative.
- the at least four triads are selected such that a first triad includes a white point, a second triad includes the white point, and no other triads include the white point.
- the at least four primaries include at least one virtual primary.
- the at least one virtual primary is a virtual magenta primary, a virtual yellow primary, a virtual cyan primary, and/or a white point.
- the present invention provides a system for color conversion in a multi-primary color system including a color signal corresponding to XYZ coordinates of a color, at least five primaries, wherein the at least five primaries include at least four color primaries and a virtual primary within a color gamut formed using the at least four color primaries, at least four triads, wherein each of the at least four triads includes two adjacent primaries of the at least four color primaries and the virtual primary, at least four XYZ-to-triad matrices, wherein each of the at least four XYZ-to-triad matrices corresponds to one of the at least four triads, and at least one display device, wherein the XYZ coordinates are multiplied by the at least four XYZ-to-triad matrices to determine one of the at least four triads in which the XYZ coordinates are located, thereby creating an updated color signal, and wherein the at least
- the at least four color primaries include red (R), green (G), blue (B), cyan (C), magenta (M), and yellow (Y).
- the virtual primary is a white point. In one embodiment, the at least four color primaries includes at least one virtual color primary.
- the present invention provides a system for color conversion in a multi-primary color system including a color signal corresponding to XYZ coordinates of a color, six primaries, eight triads, wherein each of the eight triads includes three of the six primaries, eight XYZ-to-triad matrices, wherein each of the eight XYZ-to- triad matrices corresponds to one of the eight triads, and at least one display device, wherein the XYZ coordinates are multiplied by each of the eight XYZ-to-triad matrices to determine two of the eight triads in which the XYZ coordinates are located, wherein a sum of primary components of the two triads is determined on a per-component basis, and wherein the sum is divided by two, thereby creating an updated color signal, and wherein the at least one display device is operable to display the updated color signal.
- each of the eight triads does not contain a primary and its complement.
- the six primaries include red (R), green (G), blue (B), cyan (C), magenta (M), and yellow (Y).
- the eight triads include RGB, CMY, RBM, CGB, RGY, CMB, RMY, and CGY.
- FIG. 101 is a schematic diagram of an embodiment of the invention illustrating a computer system, generally described as 800, having a network 810, a plurality of computing devices 820, 830, 840, a server 850, and a database 870.
- the server 850 is constructed, configured, and coupled to enable communication over a network 810 with a plurality of computing devices 820, 830, 840.
- the server 850 includes a processing unit 851 with an operating system 852.
- the operating system 852 enables the server 850 to communicate through network 810 with the remote, distributed user devices.
- Database 870 may house an operating system 872, memory 874, and programs 876.
- the system 800 includes a network 810 for distributed communication via a wireless communication antenna 812 and processing by at least one mobile communication computing device 830.
- wireless and wired communication and connectivity between devices and components described herein include wireless network communication such as WI-FI, WORLDWIDE INTEROPERABILITY FOR MICROWAVE ACCESS (WIMAX), Radio Frequency (RF) communication including RF identification (RFID), NEAR FIELD COMMUNICATION (NFC), BLUETOOTH including BLUETOOTH LOW ENERGY (BLE), ZIGBEE, Infrared (IR) communication, cellular communication, satellite communication, Universal Serial Bus (USB), Ethernet communications, communication via fiber-optic cables, coaxial cables, twisted pair cables, and/or any other type of wireless or wired communication.
- WI-FI WI-FI
- RF Radio Frequency
- RFID RF identification
- NFC NEAR FIELD COMMUNICATION
- BLUETOOTH including BLUETOOTH LOW ENERGY (BLE)
- ZIGBEE Infrared
- IR Infrared
- the system 800 is a virtualized computing system capable of executing any or all aspects of software and/or application components presented herein on the computing devices 820, 830, 840.
- the computer system 800 may be implemented using hardware or a combination of software and hardware, either in a dedicated computing device, or integrated into another entity, or distributed across multiple entities or computing devices.
- the computing devices 820, 830, 840 are intended to represent various forms of electronic devices including at least a processor and a memory, such as a server, blade server, mainframe, mobile phone, personal digital assistant (PDA), smartphone, desktop computer, notebook computer, tablet computer, workstation, laptop, and other similar computing devices.
- PDA personal digital assistant
- the computing device 820 includes components such as a processor 860, a system memory 862 having a random access memory (RAM) 864 and a read-only memory (ROM) 866, and a system bus 868 that couples the memory 862 to the processor 860.
- the computing device 830 may additionally include components such as a storage device 890 for storing the operating system 892 and one or more application programs 894, a network interface unit 896, and/or an input/output controller 898. Each of the components may be coupled to each other through at least one bus 868.
- the input/output controller 898 may receive and process input from, or provide output to, a number of other devices 899, including, but not limited to, alphanumeric input devices, mice, electronic styluses, display units, touch screens, signal generation devices (e.g., speakers), or printers.
- other devices 899 including, but not limited to, alphanumeric input devices, mice, electronic styluses, display units, touch screens, signal generation devices (e.g., speakers), or printers.
- the processor 860 may be a general- purpose microprocessor (e.g., a central processing unit (CPU)), a graphics processing unit (GPU), a microcontroller, a Digital Signal Processor (DSP), an Application Specific Integrated Circuit (ASIC), a Field Programmable Gate Array (FPGA), a Programmable Logic Device (PLD), a controller, a state machine, gated or transistor logic, discrete hardware components, or any other suitable entity or combinations thereof that can perform calculations, process instructions for execution, and/or other manipulations of information.
- a general- purpose microprocessor e.g., a central processing unit (CPU)
- GPU graphics processing unit
- DSP Digital Signal Processor
- ASIC Application Specific Integrated Circuit
- FPGA Field Programmable Gate Array
- PLD Programmable Logic Device
- multiple processors 860 and/or multiple buses 868 may be used, as appropriate, along with multiple memories 862 of multiple types (e.g., a combination of a DSP and a microprocessor, a plurality of microprocessors, one or more microprocessors in conjunction with a DSP core).
- multiple memories 862 of multiple types (e.g., a combination of a DSP and a microprocessor, a plurality of microprocessors, one or more microprocessors in conjunction with a DSP core).
- multiple computing devices may be connected, with each device providing portions of the necessary operations (e.g., a server bank, a group of blade servers, or a multi processor system).
- a server bank e.g., a server bank, a group of blade servers, or a multi processor system.
- some steps or methods may be performed by circuitry that is specific to a given function.
- the computer system 800 may operate in a networked environment using logical connections to local and/or remote computing devices 820, 830, 840 through a network 810.
- a computing device 830 may connect to a network 810 through a network interface unit 896 connected to a bus 868.
- Computing devices may communicate communication media through wired networks, direct-wired connections or wirelessly, such as acoustic, RF, or infrared, through an antenna 897 in communication with the network antenna 812 and the network interface unit 896, which may include digital signal processing circuitry when necessary.
- the network interface unit 896 may provide for communications under various modes or protocols.
- the instructions may be implemented in hardware, software, firmware, or any combinations thereof.
- a computer readable medium may provide volatile or non-volatile storage for one or more sets of instructions, such as operating systems, data structures, program modules, applications, or other data embodying any one or more of the methodologies or functions described herein.
- the computer readable medium may include the memory 862, the processor 860, and/or the storage media 890 and may be a single medium or multiple media (e.g., a centralized or distributed computer system) that store the one or more sets of instructions 900.
- Non-transitory computer readable media includes all computer readable media, with the sole exception being a transitory, propagating signal per se.
- the instructions 900 may further be transmitted or received over the network 810 via the network interface unit 896 as communication media, which may include a modulated data signal such as a carrier wave or other transport mechanism and includes any deliver media.
- modulated data signal means a signal that has one or more of its characteristics changed or set in a manner as to encode information in the signal.
- Storage devices 890 and memory 862 include, but are not limited to, volatile and non-volatile media such as cache, RAM, ROM, EPROM, EEPROM, FLASH memory, or other solid state memory technology, discs (e.g., digital versatile discs (DVD), HD-DVD, BLU-RAY, compact disc (CD), or CD-ROM) or other optical storage; magnetic cassettes, magnetic tape, magnetic disk storage, floppy disks, or other magnetic storage devices; or any other medium that can be used to store the computer readable instructions and which can be accessed by the computer system 800.
- volatile and non-volatile media such as cache, RAM, ROM, EPROM, EEPROM, FLASH memory, or other solid state memory technology
- discs e.g., digital versatile discs (DVD), HD-DVD, BLU-RAY, compact disc (CD), or CD-ROM
- CD-ROM compact disc
- magnetic cassettes magnetic tape
- magnetic disk storage floppy disks
- magnetic storage devices or any other medium that can be used
- the computer system 800 is within a cloud-based network.
- the server 850 is a designated physical server for distributed computing devices 820, 830, and 840.
- the server 850 is a cloud-based server platform.
- the cloud-based server platform hosts serverless functions for distributed computing devices 820, 830, and 840.
- the computer system 800 is within an edge computing network.
- the server 850 is an edge server
- the database 870 is an edge database.
- the edge server 850 and the edge database 870 are part of an edge computing platform.
- the edge server 850 and the edge database 870 are designated to distributed computing devices 820, 830, and 840.
- the edge server 850 and the edge database 870 are not designated for computing devices 820, 830, and 840.
- the distributed computing devices 820, 830, and 840 are connected to an edge server in the edge computing network based on proximity, availability, latency, bandwidth, and/or other factors.
- the computer system 800 may not include all of the components shown in FIG. 101 may include other components that are not explicitly shown in FIG. 101 or may utilize an architecture completely different than that shown in FIG. 101.
- the various illustrative logical blocks, modules, elements, circuits, and algorithms described in connection with the embodiments discussed herein may be implemented as electronic hardware, computer software, or combinations of both. To clearly illustrate the interchangeability of hardware and software, various illustrative components, blocks, modules, circuits, and steps have been described above generally in terms of their functionality. Whether such functionality is implemented as hardware or software depends upon the particular application and design constraints imposed on the overall system.
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Abstract
Description
Claims
Priority Applications (7)
| Application Number | Priority Date | Filing Date | Title |
|---|---|---|---|
| CA3181332A CA3181332A1 (en) | 2020-04-28 | 2021-04-23 | System and method for a multi-primary wide gamut color system |
| KR1020227041298A KR20230003053A (en) | 2020-04-28 | 2021-04-23 | System and method for multi-primary wide color gamut system |
| JP2022565933A JP2023524012A (en) | 2020-04-28 | 2021-04-23 | System and method for multi-primary wide-gamut color system |
| AU2021265750A AU2021265750A1 (en) | 2020-04-28 | 2021-04-23 | System and method for a multi-primary wide gamut color system |
| EP21795330.6A EP4143815A4 (en) | 2020-04-28 | 2021-04-23 | SYSTEM AND METHOD FOR A WIDE GAUGE COLOUR SYSTEM WITH MULTIPLE PRIMARY COLOURS |
| CN202180040475.1A CN115943455A (en) | 2020-04-28 | 2021-04-23 | System and method for a multi-primary wide-gamut color system |
| MX2022013610A MX2022013610A (en) | 2020-04-28 | 2021-04-23 | System and method for a multi-primary wide gamut color system. |
Applications Claiming Priority (10)
| Application Number | Priority Date | Filing Date | Title |
|---|---|---|---|
| US16/860,769 US10950161B2 (en) | 2018-10-25 | 2020-04-28 | System and method for a six-primary wide gamut color system |
| US16/860,769 | 2020-04-28 | ||
| US16/887,807 US10950162B2 (en) | 2018-10-25 | 2020-05-29 | System and method for a six-primary wide gamut color system |
| US16/887,807 | 2020-05-29 | ||
| US17/009,408 US11043157B2 (en) | 2018-10-25 | 2020-09-01 | System and method for a six-primary wide gamut color system |
| US17/009,408 | 2020-09-01 | ||
| US17/060,959 | 2020-10-01 | ||
| US17/060,959 US11062638B2 (en) | 2018-10-25 | 2020-10-01 | System and method for a multi-primary wide gamut color system |
| US17/180,441 US11037481B1 (en) | 2018-10-25 | 2021-02-19 | System and method for a multi-primary wide gamut color system |
| US17/180,441 | 2021-02-19 |
Publications (1)
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| WO2021222022A1 true WO2021222022A1 (en) | 2021-11-04 |
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| PCT/US2021/028857 Ceased WO2021222022A1 (en) | 2020-04-28 | 2021-04-23 | System and method for a multi-primary wide gamut color system |
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| EP (1) | EP4143815A4 (en) |
| JP (1) | JP2023524012A (en) |
| KR (1) | KR20230003053A (en) |
| CN (1) | CN115943455A (en) |
| AU (1) | AU2021265750A1 (en) |
| CA (1) | CA3181332A1 (en) |
| MX (1) | MX2022013610A (en) |
| WO (1) | WO2021222022A1 (en) |
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| US20210020094A1 (en) * | 2018-10-25 | 2021-01-21 | Baylor University | System and method for a multi-primary wide gamut color system |
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| RU2011107236A (en) * | 2008-07-28 | 2012-09-10 | Шарп Кабусики Кайся (Jp) | DISPLAY DEVICE WITH MULTIPLE BASIC COLORS |
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2021
- 2021-04-23 WO PCT/US2021/028857 patent/WO2021222022A1/en not_active Ceased
- 2021-04-23 EP EP21795330.6A patent/EP4143815A4/en not_active Withdrawn
- 2021-04-23 JP JP2022565933A patent/JP2023524012A/en active Pending
- 2021-04-23 CN CN202180040475.1A patent/CN115943455A/en active Pending
- 2021-04-23 CA CA3181332A patent/CA3181332A1/en active Pending
- 2021-04-23 MX MX2022013610A patent/MX2022013610A/en unknown
- 2021-04-23 KR KR1020227041298A patent/KR20230003053A/en not_active Withdrawn
- 2021-04-23 AU AU2021265750A patent/AU2021265750A1/en not_active Abandoned
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Also Published As
| Publication number | Publication date |
|---|---|
| CA3181332A1 (en) | 2021-11-04 |
| CN115943455A (en) | 2023-04-07 |
| MX2022013610A (en) | 2023-02-02 |
| EP4143815A1 (en) | 2023-03-08 |
| JP2023524012A (en) | 2023-06-08 |
| AU2021265750A1 (en) | 2022-11-24 |
| KR20230003053A (en) | 2023-01-05 |
| EP4143815A4 (en) | 2024-05-22 |
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