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root/radiance/ray/doc/man/man1/pcond.1
Revision: 1.2
Committed: Tue Dec 9 15:59:06 2003 UTC (20 years, 4 months ago) by greg
Branch: MAIN
CVS Tags: rad3R7P2, rad3R7P1, rad3R6, rad3R6P1, rad3R8
Changes since 1.1: +1 -1 lines
Log Message:
Fixed RCSid specification

File Contents

# Content
1 .\" RCSid "$Id$"
2 .TH PCOND 1 10/27/98 RADIANCE
3 .SH NAME
4 pcond - condition a RADIANCE picture for output
5 .SH SYNOPSIS
6 .B pcond
7 [
8 .B options
9 ]
10 .B input
11 [
12 .B output
13 ]
14 .SH DESCRIPTION
15 .I Pcond
16 conditions a Radiance picture for output to a display or hard copy
17 device.
18 If the dynamic range of the scene exceeds that of the display (as is
19 usually the case),
20 .I pcond
21 will compress the dynamic range of the picture such that both
22 dark and bright regions are visible.
23 In addition, certain limitations in human vision may be mimicked in
24 order to provide an appearance similar to the experience one might
25 have in the actual scene.
26 .PP
27 Command line switches turn flags off and on, changing program behavior.
28 A switch given by itself toggles the flag from off to on or on to
29 off depending on its previous state.
30 A switch followed by a '+' turns the option on explicitly.
31 A switch followed by a '-' turns the option off.
32 The default is all switches off.
33 Other options specify output device parameters in order to get more
34 accurate color and contrast.
35 .TP 10n
36 .BI -h [+-]
37 Mimic human visual response in the output.
38 The goal of this process is to produce output that correlates
39 strongly with a person's subjective impression of a scene.
40 This switch is a bundle of the
41 .I \-a,
42 .I \-v,
43 .I \-s
44 and
45 .I \-c
46 options.
47 .TP
48 .BI -a [+-]
49 Defocus darker regions of the image to simulate human visual acuity loss.
50 This option will not affect well-lit scenes.
51 .TP
52 .BI -v [+-]
53 Add veiling glare due to very bright regions in the image.
54 This simulates internal scattering in the human eye, which
55 results in a loss of visible contrast near bright sources.
56 .TP
57 .BI -s [+-]
58 Use the human contrast sensitivity function in determining the
59 exposure for the image.
60 A darker scene will have relatively lower exposure with lower
61 contrast than a well-lit scene.
62 .TP
63 .BI -c [+-]
64 If parts of the image are in the mesopic or scotopic range where
65 the cone photoreceptors lose their efficiency, this switch will
66 cause a corresponding loss of color visibility in the output and a
67 shift to a scotopic (blue-dominant) response function.
68 .TP
69 .BI -w [+-]
70 Use a center-weighted average for the exposure rather than the
71 default uniform average.
72 This may improve the exposure for scenes with high or low peripheral
73 brightness.
74 .TP
75 .BI -i \ fixfrac
76 Set the relative importance of fixation points to
77 .I fixfrac,
78 which is a value between 0 and 1.
79 If
80 .I fixfrac
81 is zero (the default), then no fixation points are used in
82 determining the local or global adaptation.
83 If
84 .I fixfrac
85 is greater than zero, then a list of fixation points is read from
86 the standard input.
87 These points are given as tab-separated (x,y) picture
88 coordinates, such as those produced by the
89 .I \-op
90 option of
91 .I ximage(1).
92 The foveal samples about these fixation points will then be weighted
93 together with the global averaging scheme such that the fixations receive
94 .I fixfrac
95 of the total weight.
96 If
97 .I fixfrac
98 is one, then only the fixation points are considered for
99 adaptation.
100 .TP
101 .BI -I [+-]
102 Rather than computing a histogram of foveal samples from the source picture,
103 use the precomputed histogram provided on the standard input.
104 This data should be given in pairs of the base-10 logarithm of
105 world luminance and a count for each bin in ascending order, as
106 computed by the
107 .I phisto(1)
108 script.
109 This option is useful for producing identical exposures of multiple
110 pictures (as in an animation), and provides greater control
111 over the histogram computation.
112 .TP
113 .BI -l [+-]
114 Use a linear response function rather than the standard dynamic
115 range compression algorithm.
116 This will prevent the loss of usable physical values in the output
117 picture, although some parts of the resulting image may be too
118 dark or too bright to see.
119 .TP
120 .BI -e \ expval
121 Set the exposure adjustment for the picture to
122 .I expval.
123 This may either be a real multiplier, or a (fractional) number of
124 f-stops preceeded by a '+' or '-'.
125 This option implies a linear response (see the
126 .I \-l
127 option above).
128 .TP
129 .BI -u \ Ldmax
130 Specifies the top of the luminance range for the target output device.
131 That is, the luminance (in candelas/m^2) for an output pixel value
132 of (R,G,B)=(1,1,1).
133 The default value is 100 cd/m^2.
134 .TP
135 .BI -d \ Lddyn
136 Specifies the dynamic range for the target output device, which is
137 the ratio of the maximum and minimum usable display luminances.
138 The default value is 32.
139 .TP
140 .BI -p " xr yr xg yg xb yb xw yw"
141 Specifies the RGB primaries for the target output device.
142 These are the 1931 CIE (x,y) chromaticity values for red, green,
143 blue and white, respectively.
144 .TP
145 .BI -f \ macbeth.cal
146 Use the given output file from
147 .I macbethcal(1)
148 to precorrect the color and contrast for the target output device.
149 This does a more thorough job than a simple primary correction
150 using the
151 .I \-p
152 option.
153 Only one of
154 .I \-f
155 or
156 .I \-p
157 may be given.
158 .TP
159 .BI -x \ mapfile
160 Put out the final mapping from world luminance to display luminance to
161 .I mapfile.
162 This file will contain values from the minimum usable world
163 luminance to the maximum (in candelas/m^2) in one column, and their
164 corresponding display luminance values (also in candelas/m^2) in the
165 second column.
166 This file may be used for debugging purposes, or to plot the mapping
167 function created by
168 .I pcond.
169 .SH EXAMPLES
170 To display an image as a person might perceive it
171 in the actual scene:
172 .IP "" .2i
173 pcond -h final.pic > display.pic
174 .br
175 ximage display.pic ; rm display.pic &
176 .PP
177 To do the same on a 24-bit display with known primary values:
178 .IP "" .2i
179 setenv DISPLAY_PRIMARIES ".580 .340 .281 .570 .153 .079 .333 .333"
180 .br
181 pcond -h -p $DISPLAY_PRIMARIES final.pic | ximage &
182 .PP
183 To prepare a picture to be sent to a film recorder destined eventually
184 for a slide projector with a minimum and maximum screen luminance of
185 1.5 and 125 candelas/m^2, respectively:
186 .IP "" .2i
187 pcond -d 83 -u 125 final.pic > film.pic
188 .PP
189 To do the same if the output colors of the standard image
190 "ray/lib/lib/macbeth_spec.pic" have been measured:
191 .IP "" .2i
192 macbethcal -c mbfilm.xyY > film.cal
193 .br
194 pcond -d 83 -u 125 -f film.cal final.pic > film.pic
195 .PP
196 To further tweak the exposure to bring out certain areas indicated by
197 dragging the right mouse button over them in
198 .I ximage:
199 .IP "" .2i
200 ximage -op -t 75 final.pic | pcond -i .5 -d 83 -u 125 -f film.cal
201 final.pic > film.pic
202 .PP
203 To use a histogram computed on every 10th animation frame:
204 .IP "" .2i
205 phisto frame*0.pic > global.hist
206 .br
207 pcond -I -s -c frame0352.pic < global.hist | ra_tiff - frame0352.tif
208 .SH REFERENCE
209 Greg Ward Larson, Holly Rushmeier, Christine Piatko,
210 ``A Visibility Matching Tone Reproduction Operator for High Dynamic Range
211 Scenes,''
212 .I "IEEE Transactions on Visualization and Computer Graphics",
213 December 1997.
214 .PP
215 http://www.sgi.com/Technology/pixformat/Larsonetal.html
216 .SH AUTHOR
217 Greg Ward Larson
218 .SH "SEE ALSO"
219 getinfo(1), macbethcal(1), normtiff(1),
220 pcompos(1), pflip(1), phisto(1), pinterp(1),
221 pvalue(1), protate(1), ra_xyze(1), rad(1), rpict(1), ximage(1)