IMPORTANT DATES
Author Deadlines
Submission Deadline 8 April
Acceptance Notification by 26 April
Final Manuscripts Due 15 May

Program Deadlines
Registration Opens mid-April
Early Registration Ends 15 May
Short Courses Begin 23 May
Technical Sessions Begin 7 June

   

Archiving 2022 Conference Registration

From CIELAB to CIEDE2000

SC10

NEW From CIELAB to CIEDE2000
Instructor: Roy S. Berns, Gray Sky Imaging
Level: Introductory
Duration: 2 hours, with a 15 minute break
Date: Thursday, 02 June
Time:
    New York: 12:45 – 15:00
    Paris: 18:45 - 21:00

Benefits:
This course enables the attendee to:

  • Understand the relationship between human color vision and CIELAB.
  • Understand the origin and derivation of CIELAB.
  • Understand how to use CIELAB for defining color differences.
  • Understand the limitations of CIELAB for defining color differences.
  • Understand the origin and derivation of CIEDE2000 for defining color differences.
  • Understand the limitations of CIEDE2000 for defining the color quality of images.

Course Description: FADGI and ISO standards require calculating the average CIEDE2000 of a test-target image as a measure of color image quality. CIEDE2000 requires colored defined using CIE L*a*b*. The course digs into CIELAB and discusses how it's modeled on human color vision. The course explains how to calculate hue, lightness, and chroma differences and combine them to calculate a total color difference, "delta-E." The CIE philosophy of correcting a color space with poor visual uniformity rather than deriving a new color space is discussed. CIEDE2000 is the correction. The course digs into this formula, and breaks it down and traces its roots to the 1970's. The course concludes by identifying strengths and weaknesses of using an average total color difference as a measure of color image quality.

Intended Audience: This course is designed for anyone that uses CIELAB and CIEDE2000 for defining color image quality.

Roy S. Berns is the chief technical officer at Gray Sky Imaging in Rochester, NY. He derived CIE94 and was a member of the CIE technical committee that derived CIEDE2000. Previously, he held the Richard S. Hunter Professor in color science, appearance, and technology within the program of color science at Rochester Institute of Technology, USA where he developed both MS and PhD programs in color science. He received BS and MS  in textiles from the University of California at Davis and a PhD  in chemistry from Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute. Berns has received scientific achievement awards from the Inter-Society Color Council, the Society of Imaging Science and Technology, the Colour Group of Great Britain, and the International Association of Colour.

Cost:
Member $ 85
Non Member $ 95
Student $ 45

For office use only:

Category
1. Short Courses
When
6/2/2022 12:45 PM - 3:00 PM
Eastern Daylight Time