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ΔEITP is Now ITU-R BT.2124 – Is the Industry Ready to Move on From ΔE2000?

Objective color difference metrics are the main tools for evaluating the color accuracy of professional reference monitors in the content creation industry. They are also vital for consumers who calibrate their displays with a desire to maintain the creators’ intent when viewing films, TV shows, and even the latest video games. Accurate predictions of perceptual color differences are essential to providing a realistic evaluation of a device’s color reproduction….

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Drift Compensation

By Joel Barsotti and Tom Schulte A monitor or TV display’s luminance and chromaticity characteristics typically drift over an extended period of…

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Display Warm Up Rates

How Long is Enough?…

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Display Profiling Solutions

A report on 3D LUT creation…

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Dental Monitor Calibration

A Report on Dental Image Presentation…

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Constant APL Test Patterns

A Report on Display Gamma Measurements…

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Consistent Presentation of Medical Images

A Report on Medical Workstation Calibration…

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Chromaticity Shift and Viewing Angle

By Dr. Raymond Soneira With this issue, we bring you a new contributor, Dr. Raymond Soneira, a research scientist with a career…

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Calman Case Studies

9/11 Memorial Museum Case Study: Enhanced Museum Visitor Experiences Written By: Tom Schulte QD Vision Case Study: Manufacturers of Color IQ Quantum-Dot…

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BT.1886 – 10 Questions, 10 Answers

Since the International Telecommunication Union (ITU) adopted BT.1886 as the recommended gamma function for flat panel displays used in HDTV studio production in 2011, some confusion has arisen over the usefulness of the function, as well as its application in the field….

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