Using Categorical Observers to Minimize Metameric Failures on Wide Color Gamut Displays

Catherine Meininger, Liam Lynch, Allison Hazebrouck, Andy Masia, Tom Lianza

It is common industry practice to calibrate displays using measurement data based on the CIE-1931 2° Standard Observer color-matching function (CMF) to represent the human visual system response. Anecdotal observations, with some experimental evidence, have shown that adjusting two displays with different spectral power distributions to the same CIE-1931 tristimulus values produces a calibration that is not a visual match for some if not all, human observers. Research shows that this is due to deviations in CMFs between observers that also differ from the CIE-1931 2° Standard Observer and that populations of observers can be clustered into categories, each of which has largely similar CMFs. It has been hypothesized that selecting an appropriate alternate set of CMFs may reduce these metameric failures and increase productivity throughout a motion-picture workflow. This paper presents results from a psychophysical study to determine if a “best-match” CMF exists for a real human observer from Asano and Fairchild's ten categorical observers that reduces metameric failures between two displays with significantly different spectral power distributions. The results are further analyzed to support a discussion about the practical implementation of categorical observer transforms in a motion-picture workflow.

Print ISSN
Electronic ISSN
2160-2492
Published
2024-09
Content type
Original Research
Keywords
metamerism, observer metamerism, color-matching functions, categorical observers
DOI
10.5594/JMI.2024/WYOR1428