The color rendering of a light source refers to its ability to reveal the colors of various objects faithfully (i.e. to produce illuminant metamerism) in comparison with an ideal or natural light source. Light sources with good color rendering are desirable in color-critical applications such as neonatal care [1] and art restoration. It is defined by the International Commission on Illumination (CIE) as follows: [2]
Effect of an illuminant on the color appearance of objects by conscious or subconscious comparison with their color appearance under a reference illuminant.
A wide variety of quantitative measures have been devised to measure the color rendering of a light source, to the human eye or to the camera. Notable ones include:
Researchers used daylight as the benchmark to which to compare color rendering of electric lights. In 1948, daylight was described as the ideal source of illumination for good color rendering because "it (daylight) displays (1) a great variety of colours, (2) makes it easy to distinguish slight shades of colour, and (3) the colours of objects around us obviously look natural". [6]
Around the middle of the 20th century, color scientists took an interest in assessing the ability of artificial lights to accurately reproduce colors. European researchers attempted to describe illuminants by measuring the spectral power distribution (SPD) in "representative" spectral bands, whereas their North American counterparts studied the colorimetric effect of the illuminants on reference objects. [7]
The color rendering index (CRI) of 1974 is the product of a CIE committee's study on the topic of color rendering. It uses the American colorimetric approach with a panel of human subjects instead of requiring spectrophotometry. Eight samples of varying hue would be alternately lit with two illuminants, and the color appearance compared. Since no color appearance model existed at the time, it was decided to base the evaluation on color differences in a suitable color space, CIEUVW. The residual difference in chromaticity is resolved with a chromatic adaptation transform before comparing to the reference illuminant. Each color difference was translated to a sub-score, eight of which are averaged to produce the final score of Ra. [8]
As early as 1971, an analogue of CRI for televisions have been devised by workers at the BBC. [9] At that time, the relatively broad-band nature of light sources meant that the CRI still approximated the color rendering for television cameras, an assumption quickly broken by the advent of LED lighting. As a result, the European Broadcasting Union re-introduced the concept of a television lighting consistency index (TLCI) in 2012, followed by a television luminaire matching factor (TLMF) in 2013 for mixed lights. [3]
To calculate a TLCI, a full measure of the spectral power distribution (SPD) of the light source is first taken. From this SPD a correlated color temperature (CCT) is found, which provides the reference illuminant. Under the test and reference illuminant, an image of the ColorChecker is simulated using known reflectivities and the color curves of an average HDTV camera and display. The differences are calculated in CIEDE2000. With the TLMF, the reference is not specified by a CCT, but by a user directly. [10]
The spectral similarity index (SSI) of 2016 is a scale that completely forgoes the comparison of color samples, instead directly comparing the SPDs of one light source to the reference. [4] Its developers argue that difference among cameras mean that TLCI can only describe three-chip television cameras, not the more-varied spectral sensitivities of single-chip digital cinema, still cameras, or film. [11] (In theory, color gels also introduce variations that are hard to be captured by TLCI.)
The SSI is calculated by taking two integrated, normalized SPDs in the 5-nm intervals from 375 to 675 nm and finding a weighted relative difference between them. This weighted relative difference is convolved, and the magnitude of the result is translated into a 100-point value. A low SSI only warns of potential color-rendering issues, but neither confirms the presence of one nor indicates what errors are likely to occur. [11]
TM-30 is the current (as of 2021) CIE recommended measure for color rendering as perceived by humans. It generates a large set of outputs, including an overall fidelity index (Rf), an overall gamut index (Rg) for changes in chroma, a gamut shape graph, and detailed values for chroma, hue, and color fidelity for each of the 16 hue ranges, plus color fidelity scores for each of the 99 sample colors. It uses the CAM02-UCS color space. The Rf has been adopted by the CIE as CIE 224:2017 "color fidelity index" (CFI). [12]
As with other newer scales, TM-30 is calculated from a SPD with reference to a SPD of the same CCT. [12] The uniqueness of TM-30 is that it goes beyond fidelity (accuracy of color reproduction) to describe other aspects of color rendering. This extra information allows for, e.g. fidelity to be sacrificed for vividness of skin tones under a certain design criterion. Three reference design intents and priority levels are defined in TM-30 Annex E. [13]
Before the aforementioned scales are devised to replace CRI, a number of other measures have been proposed. None of them have seen wide use, however:
Color temperature is a parameter describing the color of a visible light source by comparing it to the color of light emitted by an idealized opaque, non-reflective body. The temperature of the ideal emitter that matches the color most closely is defined as the color temperature of the original visible light source. Color temperature is usually measured in kelvins. The color temperature scale describes only the color of light emitted by a light source, which may actually be at a different temperature.
In colorimetry, metamerism is a perceived matching of colors with different (nonmatching) spectral power distributions. Colors that match this way are called metamers.
The International Commission on Illumination is the international authority on light, illumination, colour, and colour spaces. It was established in 1913 as a successor to the Commission Internationale de Photométrie, which was founded in 1900, and is today based in Vienna, Austria.
The CIELAB color space, also referred to as L*a*b*, is a color space defined by the International Commission on Illumination in 1976. It expresses color as three values: L* for perceptual lightness and a* and b* for the four unique colors of human vision: red, green, blue and yellow. CIELAB was intended as a perceptually uniform space, where a given numerical change corresponds to a similar perceived change in color. While the LAB space is not truly perceptually uniform, it nevertheless is useful in industry for detecting small differences in color.
Colorimetry is "the science and technology used to quantify and describe physically the human color perception". It is similar to spectrophotometry, but is distinguished by its interest in reducing spectra to the physical correlates of color perception, most often the CIE 1931 XYZ color space tristimulus values and related quantities.
Chromatic adaptation is the human visual system’s ability to adjust to changes in illumination in order to preserve the appearance of object colors. It is responsible for the stable appearance of object colors despite the wide variation of light which might be reflected from an object and observed by our eyes. A chromatic adaptation transform (CAT) function emulates this important aspect of color perception in color appearance models.
A color rendering index (CRI) is a quantitative measure of the ability of a light source to reveal the colors of various objects faithfully in comparison with a natural or standard light source. Light sources with a high CRI are desirable in color-critical applications such as neonatal care and art restoration.
In physics and color science, the Planckian locus or black body locus is the path or locus that the color of an incandescent black body would take in a particular chromaticity space as the blackbody temperature changes. It goes from deep red at low temperatures through orange, yellowish, white, and finally bluish white at very high temperatures.
A white point is a set of tristimulus values or chromaticity coordinates that serve to define the color "white" in image capture, encoding, or reproduction. Depending on the application, different definitions of white are needed to give acceptable results. For example, photographs taken indoors may be lit by incandescent lights, which are relatively orange compared to daylight. Defining "white" as daylight will give unacceptable results when attempting to color-correct a photograph taken with incandescent lighting.
The correlated color temperature is defined as "the temperature of the Planckian radiator whose perceived color most closely resembles that of a given stimulus at the same brightness and under specified viewing conditions."
The CIE 1931 color spaces are the first defined quantitative links between distributions of wavelengths in the electromagnetic visible spectrum, and physiologically perceived colors in human color vision. The mathematical relationships that define these color spaces are essential tools for color management, important when dealing with color inks, illuminated displays, and recording devices such as digital cameras. The system was designed in 1931 by the "Commission Internationale de l'éclairage", known in English as the International Commission on Illumination.
A standard illuminant is a theoretical source of visible light with a spectral power distribution that is published. Standard illuminants provide a basis for comparing images or colors recorded under different lighting.
A gray card is a middle gray reference, typically used together with a reflective light meter, as a way to produce consistent image exposure and/or color in video production, film and photography.
The ColorChecker Color Rendition Chart is a color calibration target consisting of a cardboard-framed arrangement of 24 squares of painted samples. The ColorChecker was introduced in a 1976 paper by McCamy, Marcus, and Davidson in the Journal of Applied Photographic Engineering. The chart’s color patches have spectral reflectances intended to mimic those of natural objects such as human skin, foliage, and flowers, to have consistent color appearance under a variety of lighting conditions, especially as detected by typical color photographic film, and to be stable over time.
Color quality scale (CQS) is a color rendering score – a quantitative measure of the ability of a light source to reproduce colors of illuminated objects. Developed by researchers at NIST the metric aims to overcome some of the issues inherent in the widely used color rendering index.
A tristimulus colorimeter, colloquially shortened to colorimeter, is used in digital imaging to profile and calibrate output devices. It takes a limited number of wideband spectral energy readings along the visible spectrum by using filtered photodetectors; e.g. silicon photodiodes.
High-CRI LED lighting is a light-emitting diode (LED) lighting source that offers a high color rendering index (CRI).
The Academy Color Encoding System (ACES) is a color image encoding system created under the auspices of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences. ACES is characterised by a color accurate workflow, with "seamless interchange of high quality motion picture images regardless of source".
A color appearance model (CAM) is a mathematical model that seeks to describe the perceptual aspects of human color vision, i.e. viewing conditions under which the appearance of a color does not tally with the corresponding physical measurement of the stimulus source.
In home cinema and video editing technology, bias lighting is a weak light source on the backside of a screen or monitor that illuminates the wall or surface behind and just around the display.