Light Field & High-Dynamic-Range Imaging
Tuesday, 7 August
10:30 am - 12:15 pm
Room 6CF
Session Chair/Discussant: Sing Bing Kang, Microsoft Research
Veiling Glare in High-Dynamic-Range Imaging
Veiling glare limits the dynamic range that can be captured by high-dynamic-range imaging techniques. This method removes glare using a high-frequency mask to reduce noise and increase dynamic range.Eino-Ville Talvala
Andrew Adams
Mark Horowitz
Marc Levoy
Stanford University
Do HDR Displays Support LDR Content? A Psychophysical Evaluation
A set of psychophysical experiments compared high-dynamic-range tone-mapping and conventional imaging pipelines, and set guidelines to optimally display eight-bit legacy imagery on HDR display systems.Ahmet Oguz Akyuz
University of Central Florida
Erik Reinhard
University of Bristol
Roland Fleming
Bernhard E. Riecke
Heinrich H. Bülthoff
Max-Planck-Institut für biologische Kybernetik
Ldr2Hdr: On-the-Fly Reverse Tone Mapping of Legacy Video and Photographs
A method for on-the-fly boosting of the dynamic range of legacy video for viewing on high-dynamic-range displays.Allan G. Rempel
Matthew Trentacoste
The University of British Columbia
Helge Seetzen
The University of British Columbia and Brightside Technologies
H. David Young
Wolfgang Heidrich
Lorne Whitehead
The University of British Columbia
Greg Ward
Brightside Technologies
Rendering for an Interactive 360-Degree Light Field Display
An autostereoscopic light field display using commodity graphics and projector hardware. It displays interactive 3D graphics or photographic 3D images with correct horizontal perspective and tracked vertical parallax.Andrew Jones
USC Institute for Creative Technologies
Ian McDowall
Fakespace Labs
Hideshi Yamada
Sony Corporation
Mark Bolas
USC School of Cinematic Arts
Paul Debevec
USC Institute for Creative Technologies
