Displays with non-impulse temporal response suffer from motion blur artifacts. This paper will show that the temporal impulse response and related temporal bandwidth provide a simple and direct way to quantify motion blur. a b c Figure 6: Double rate driving (f,t normalized to normal rate). a) Frequency response; b) Impulse response; c) Bandwidths. SID 05 DIGEST • 1581
This paper describes the relation between temporal display response and motion blur for several motion blur reduction methods (higher frame rate, scanning backlight, black data insertion). The impulse responses and Motion Picture Response Times (MPRTs) of these methods are calculated, compared and discussed.
New display principles aim at supreme image quality. The temporal aspects of these devices sometimes remain underexposed in the literature, and the paper presents an overview of new artifacts and possible remedies with signal processing. 1. Other effects are left out for simplicity, but lead to similar artifacts.
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