IMPORTANT DATES

2020
 Abstract submission opens
1 June
 Final submission deadline 7 Oct
 Manuscripts due for FastTrack
 publication
23 Nov
 Early Bird registration ends 18 Dec
 Early registration ends 31 Dec


2021
 Short Courses begin
11 Jan
 Symposium begins
18 Jan
 All manuscripts due
8 Feb
 Conference Portal Closes
30 April

Electronic Imaging 2021

High-Dynamic-Range (HDR) Theory and Technology

Course Number: SC08

High-Dynamic-Range (HDR) Theory and Technology
Instructors: John J. McCann, McCann Imaging, and Alessandro Rizzi, University of Milano
Level: Overview
Duration: 2 Hours plus 15-minute break and 30-minute post-class discussion
Course Time:
    New York: Friday 15 January, 10:00 – 12:15
    Paris: Friday 15 January, 16:00 – 18:15
    Tokyo: Saturday 16 January, 00:00 – 02:15

Benefits
This course enables the attendee to:

  • Measure the optical limits in acquisition and display; in particular measure the scene dependent effects of optical glare.
  • Compare the accuracy of scene capture using single and multiple-exposures in normal and RAW formats.
  • Engage in a discussion of human spatial vision that responds to the retinal image altered by glare.
  • Engage in a discussion of current HDR TV systems and standards: tone-rendering vs. spatial HDR methods.
  • Explore the history of HDR imaging.

To understand HDR imaging is to understand the properties and limitations of the Artist's Goal, the Calculated Sensation Goal, and the Accurate Scene Radiance Goal.

This course emphasizes measurements of physics (accurate reproduction) and psychophysics (visual appearance). Physics shows limits caused by optical glare; HDR does not reproduce scene radiances. Psychophysics shows that human vision's spatial-image-processing renders scene appearance.

The course reviews successful HDR reproductions; limits of radiance reproduction; HDR TV's technology and standards; appearance and display luminance; and appearance models. HDR technology is a complex problem controlled by optics, signal-processing, and visual limits. The solution depends on its goal: physical information or preferred appearance.

Intended Audience
Anyone interested in using HDR imaging: science, technology of displays, and applications. This includes students, color scientists, imaging researchers, medical imagers, software and hardware engineers, photographers, cinematographers, and production specialists.

Alessandro Rizzi is full professor and head of MIPSLab, department of computer science, University of Milan. He researches color, HDR, and related perceptual issues. He is one of the founders of the Italian Color Group, Secretary of CIE Division 8, an IS&T Fellow and vice president, topical editor of the Journal of the Optical Society of America, and associate editor of the Journal of Electronic Imaging. In 2015 Rizzi received the Davies Medal from the Royal Photographic Society.

John McCann worked in, and managed, Polaroid's Vision Research Laboratory (1961-1996). He studied Retinex theory, color constancy, color from rod/cone interactions at low light levels, image reproduction, appearance with scattered light, cataracts, and HDR imaging. He is a Fellow of IS&T and the Optical Society of America (OSA); a past president of IS&T and the Artists Foundation, Boston; IS&T/OSA 2002 Edwin Land Medalist and IS&T 2005 Honorary Member.

COST

by December 31:
   member   $95
   non-member   $105
   student   $45
after December 31:
   member   $120
   non-member   $130
    student   $70


Discounts given for multiple classes.
See Registration page for details and to register.

For office use only:

Category
Short Courses
Track
Track 1 Image Processing
When
1/15/2021 10:00 AM - 12:15 PM
Eastern Standard Time