Quantitative Evaluation and Attribute of Overall Brightness in a High Dynamic Range World

Stelios Ploumis, Ronan Boitard, Jean-Philippe Jacquemin, Gerwin Damberg, Anders Ballestad, Panos Nasiopoulos

Brightness is an attribute of visual perception to describe how intense the light entering the eye is. Since human perception is not linearly related to light intensity, characterizing brightness is a challenging task. In Standard Dynamic Range (SDR) imagery, brightness is often quantified using the Average Picture Level (APL) which is the average of all pixels' code values normalized by the maximum signal code value. APL provides a simple and commonly used brightness metric for SDR however its validity for High Dynamic Range (HDR) content has never been assessed. Due to the higher luminance range that HDR supports, HDR content are encoded using a different transfer function than SDR. Thus different distribution of pixel's code values is to be expected between HDR and SDR content. In this work, we evaluate the efficiency of the APL metric to quantify brightness of HDR content. We describe, using patches and professionally graded images, pixel's distribution where the APL fails to distinguish relative brightness between pair of images. To overcome APL shortcomings, we propose a brightness metric based on the geometric mean and variance of an image luma code values. We then conduct two subjective experiments to compare the efficiency of APL and our metric. Results show that the proposed metric predicts more accurately the relative brightness between two frames.

Published
2018-10
Content type
Original Research
Keywords
High Dynamic Range, Image Attribute, Brightness Evaluation
DOI
10.5594/M001838
ISBN
978-1-61482-960-7