| The Eye and High-Dynamic-Range Vision | p. 1 |
| References | p. 12 |
| The High-Dynamic-Range Sensor | p. 13 |
| General Considerations | p. 13 |
| The HDRC (High-Dynamic-Range CMOS) Pixel | p. 19 |
| The HDRC Sensor | p. 27 |
| Fixed-Pattern Correction of HDR Imagers | p. 32 |
| Physical Background of Logarithmic OECF | p. 32 |
| Parameter Extraction with Software | p. 33 |
| Effects of Parameter Variation on the OECF | p. 35 |
| Presentation of Three Correction Algorithms | p. 37 |
| New Parameterized Correction Algorithm | p. 38 |
| Masking Process | p. 40 |
| Algorithm Including Temperature | p. 41 |
| Correction Procedure and Runtime | p. 46 |
| Summary | p. 47 |
| HDRC Dynamic Performance | p. 47 |
| HDRC Sensor with Global Shutter | p. 53 |
| References | p. 56 |
| HDR Image Noise | p. 57 |
| References | p. 63 |
| High-Dynamic-Range Contrast and Color Management | p. 65 |
| References | p. 71 |
| HDR Video Cameras | p. 73 |
| Introduction | p. 73 |
| HDRC CamCube Miniaturized Camera Module | p. 75 |
| Features of the HDRC CamCube | p. 76 |
| Assembly Techniques | p. 76 |
| System Design | p. 77 |
| Application Example | p. 78 |
| HDRC Camera Front-End | p. 78 |
| Digital HDRC Camera Link™ System | p. 82 |
| Features of the HDRC Camera Link Camera | p. 84 |
| Features of the "IP3 Control" Software | p. 84 |
| Application Example | p. 84 |
| Intelligent HDRC GEVILUX CCTV Camera | p. 85 |
| Features of the Camera | p. 85 |
| HDR Video-Based Aircraft Docking Guidance | p. 90 |
| Summary | p. 90 |
| Introduction | p. 91 |
| Operation | p. 92 |
| Challenges to the Sensor System | p. 93 |
| HDR Camera with Improved Sensitivity | p. 94 |
| Conclusion | p. 97 |
| References | p. 97 |
| Lenses for HDR Imaging | p. 99 |
| HDRC Cameras for High-Speed Machine Vision | p. 107 |
| General Requirements | p. 107 |
| Special Characteristics | p. 108 |
| Methods for Obtaining the Specific Image Information | p. 109 |
| Optoelectronic Transfer Function (Lookup Table, LUT) | p. 110 |
| Mode 1: 1 | p. 111 |
| Mode Rec. 709 | p. 111 |
| Mode Stretched | p. 112 |
| Mode CatEye | p. 112 |
| Mode CatEye2 | p. 112 |
| Application Example Surface Inspection | p. 113 |
| Evaluation Algorithms | p. 114 |
| Robot Controlled Image-Processing System for Fully Automated Surface Inspection | p. 118 |
| References | p. 121 |
| HDR Vision for Driver Assistance | p. 123 |
| Introduction | p. 123 |
| Components for Predictive Driver Assistance Systems | p. 124 |
| Ultrasonic Sensors | p. 124 |
| Long Range Radar 77 GHz | p. 125 |
| Video Sensor | p. 125 |
| Driver Assistance Systems for Convenience and for Safety | p. 127 |
| Video-BasedDriverAssistanceSystems | p. 128 |
| Video System | p. 128 |
| Image Processing | p. 130 |
| Night Vision Improvement System | p. 130 |
| Night Vision Enhancement by Image Presentation | p. 131 |
| Night Vision Warning | p. 132 |
| Sensor Data Fusion | p. 133 |
| Lane Detection and Lane Departure Warning | p. 134 |
| Traffic Sign Recognition | p. 134 |
| Conclusion | p. 135 |
| References | p. 136 |
| Miniature HDRC Cameras for Endoscopy | p. 137 |
| References | p. 139 |
| HDR Sub-retinal Implant for the Vision Impaired | p. 141 |
| Introduction | p. 141 |
| Electronic HDR Photoreceptors | p. 142 |
| The Differential Principle | p. 143 |
| The Complete Amplifier Cell | p. 143 |
| The Retinal Implant | p. 145 |
| References | p. 145 |
| HDR Tone Mapping | p. 147 |
| Taxonomy | p. 148 |
| Spatially Invariant Operators | p. 149 |
| Spatially Variant Operators | p. 153 |
| HDR Video: Specific Conditions and Requirements | p. 159 |
| Tone Mapping for HDR Video | p. 161 |
| Response Curve Compression | p. 161 |
| Local Details Enhancement | p. 162 |
| Temporal Luminance Adaptation | p. 163 |
| Key Value | p. 164 |
| Tone Mapping | p. 165 |
| Simulating Perceptual Effects | p. 166 |
| Scotopic Vision | p. 166 |
| Visual Acuity | p. 167 |
| Veiling Luminance | p. 168 |
| Tone Mapping with Perceptual Effects | p. 169 |
| Bilateral Tone Mapping for HDRC Video | p. 170 |
| Summary | p. 175 |
| References | p. 175 |
| HDR Image and Video Compression | p. 179 |
| Introduction | p. 179 |
| Device-Referred and Scene-Referred Representation of Images | p. 180 |
| HDR Image and Video Compression Pipeline | p. 180 |
| HDR Image Formats | p. 181 |
| Radiance's HDR Format | p. 181 |
| LogLuv TIFF | p. 182 |
| OpenEXR | p. 183 |
| Subband Encoding - JPEG HDR | p. 183 |
| HDR Extension to MPEG Video Compression | p. 184 |
| Perceptual Encoding of HDR Color | p. 187 |
| Software for HDR Image and Video Processing | p. 191 |
| References | p. 191 |
| HDR Applications in Computer Graphics | p. 193 |
| Introduction | p. 193 |
| Capturing HDR Image Data | p. 194 |
| Multiexposure Techniques | p. 194 |
| Photometric Calibration | p. 194 |
| Image-Based Object Digitization | p. 196 |
| Image-Based Capture of Spatially Varying BRDFs | p. 196 |
| Acquisition of Translucent Objects | p. 197 |
| Image-Based Lighting in Image Synthesis | p. 199 |
| Rendering Techniques for Image-based Lighting | p. 200 |
| A CAVE System for Interactive Global Illumination Modeling in Car Interior | p. 203 |
| Interactive Lighting in Mixed Reality Applications | p. 205 |
| Requirements for HDR Camera Systems | p. 206 |
| References | p. 208 |
| High-Dynamic Range Displays | p. 211 |
| HDR Display Requirements | p. 211 |
| HDR Display Design | p. 213 |
| LED Backlight | p. 215 |
| LCD Panel | p. 216 |
| Image Processing Algorithm | p. 216 |
| HDR Display Performance | p. 221 |
| Alternative Implementation | p. 222 |
| Conclusion | p. 222 |
| References | p. 222 |
| Appendix | p. 225 |
| Symbols | p. 225 |
| Abbreviations | p. 229 |
| Glossary | p. 230 |
| Some Useful Quantities and Relations | p. 231 |
| Trademarks | p. 231 |
| Index | p. 233 |
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