DocumentCode :
796972
Title :
HVS-Aware Dynamic Backlight Scaling in TFT-LCDs
Author :
Iranli, Ali ; Lee, Wonbok ; Pedram, Massoud
Volume :
14
Issue :
10
fYear :
2006
Firstpage :
1103
Lastpage :
1116
Abstract :
Liquid crystal displays (LCDs) have appeared in applications ranging from medical equipment to automobiles, gas pumps, laptops, and handheld portable computers. These display components present a cascaded energy attenuator to the battery of the handheld device which is responsible for about half of the energy drain at maximum display intensity. As such, the display components become the main focus of every effort for maximization of embedded system´s battery lifetime. This paper proposes an approach for pixel transformation of the displayed image to increase the potential energy saving of the backlight scaling method. The proposed approach takes advantage of human visual system (HVS) characteristics and tries to minimize distortion between the perceived brightness values of the individual pixels in the original image and those of the backlight-scaled image. This is in contrast to previous backlight scaling approaches which simply match the luminance values of the individual pixels in the original and backlight-scaled images. Furthermore, this paper proposes a temporally-aware backlight scaling technique for video streams. The goal is to maximize energy saving in the display system by means of dynamic backlight dimming subject to a video distortion tolerance. The video distortion comprises of: 1) an intra-frame (spatial) distortion component due to frame-sensitive backlight scaling and transmittance function tuning and 2) an inter-frame (temporal) distortion component due to large-step backlight dimming across frames modulated by the psychophysical characteristics of the human visual system. The proposed backlight scaling technique is capable of efficiently computing the flickering effect online and subsequently using a measure of the temporal distortion to appropriately adjust the slack on the intra-frame spatial distortion, thereby, achieving a good balance between the two sources of distortion while maximizing the backlight dimming-driven energy saving in the dis- - play system and meeting an overall video quality figure of merit. The proposed dynamic backlight scaling approach is amenable to highly efficient hardware realization and has been implemented on the Apollo Testbed II. Actual current measurements demonstrate the effectiveness of proposed technique compared to the previous backlight dimming techniques, which have ignored the temporal distortion effect
Keywords :
liquid crystal displays; thin film transistors; visual perception; TFT-LCD; battery lifetime; brightness values; cascaded energy attenuator; display components; display intensity; display system; dynamic backlight scaling method; embedded system; flickering effect online; frame-sensitive backlight scaling; handheld device; human visual system; inter-frame distortion; intra-frame distortion; large-step backlight dimming; liquid crystal displays; luminance values; pixel transformation; temporal distortion effect; thin film transistor liquid crystal display; transmittance function tuning; video distortion tolerance; video streams; Application software; Batteries; Biomedical equipment; Computer displays; Humans; Liquid crystal displays; Pixel; Portable computers; Vehicle dynamics; Visual system; Backlight scaling; hunan visual system; power management; thin-film transistor-liquid crystal display (TFT-LCD);
fLanguage :
English
Journal_Title :
Very Large Scale Integration (VLSI) Systems, IEEE Transactions on
Publisher :
ieee
ISSN :
1063-8210
Type :
jour
DOI :
10.1109/TVLSI.2006.884151
Filename :
1715347
Link To Document :
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