6 #include "colorspace_conversion_effect.h"
8 #include "effect_util.h"
10 #include "white_balance_effect.h"
12 using namespace Eigen;
17 // Temperature is in Kelvin. Formula from http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Planckian_locus#Approximation .
18 Vector3d convert_color_temperature_to_xyz(float T)
20 double invT = 1.0 / T;
24 assert(T <= 15000.0f);
27 x = ((-0.2661239e9 * invT - 0.2343589e6) * invT + 0.8776956e3) * invT + 0.179910;
29 x = ((-3.0258469e9 * invT + 2.1070379e6) * invT + 0.2226347e3) * invT + 0.240390;
33 y = ((-1.1063814 * x - 1.34811020) * x + 2.18555832) * x - 0.20219683;
34 } else if (T <= 4000.0f) {
35 y = ((-0.9549476 * x - 1.37418593) * x + 2.09137015) * x - 0.16748867;
37 y = (( 3.0817580 * x - 5.87338670) * x + 3.75112997) * x - 0.37001483;
40 return Vector3d(x, y, 1.0 - x - y);
44 * There are several different perceptual color spaces with different intended
45 * uses; for instance, CIECAM02 uses one space (CAT02) for purposes of computing
46 * chromatic adaptation (the effect that the human eye perceives an object as
47 * the same color even under differing illuminants), but a different space
48 * (Hunt-Pointer-Estevez, or HPE) for the actual perception post-adaptation.
50 * CIECAM02 chromatic adaptation, while related to the transformation we want,
51 * is a more complex phenomenon that depends on factors like the viewing conditions
52 * (e.g. amount of surrounding light), and can no longer be implemented by just scaling
53 * each component in LMS space. The simpler way out is to use the HPE matrix,
54 * which is intended to be close to the actual cone response; this results in
55 * the “von Kries transformation” when we couple it with normalization in LMS space.
57 * http://www.brucelindbloom.com/index.html?Eqn_ChromAdapt.html compares
58 * von Kries transformation with using another matrix, the Bradford matrix,
59 * and generally finds that the Bradford method gives a better result,
60 * as in giving better matches with the true result (as calculated using
61 * spectral matching) when converting between various CIE illuminants.
62 * The actual perceptual differences were found to be minor, though.
63 * We use the Bradford tranformation matrix from that page, and compute the
64 * inverse ourselves. (The Bradford matrix is also used in CMCCAT97.)
66 const double xyz_to_lms_matrix[9] = {
67 0.7328, -0.7036, 0.0030,
68 0.4296, 1.6975, 0.0136,
69 -0.1624, 0.0061, 0.9834,
73 * For a given reference color (given in XYZ space), compute scaling factors
74 * for L, M and S. What we want at the output is turning the reference color
75 * into a scaled version of the D65 illuminant (giving it R=G=B in sRGB), or
77 * (sL ref_L, sM ref_M, sS ref_S) = (s d65_L, s d65_M, s d65_S)
79 * This removes two degrees of freedom from our system, and we only need to find s.
80 * A reasonable last constraint would be to preserve Y, approximately the brightness,
81 * for the reference color. Thus, we choose our D65 illuminant's Y such that it is
82 * equal to the reference color's Y, and the rest is easy.
84 Vector3d compute_lms_scaling_factors(const Vector3d &ref_xyz)
86 Vector3d ref_lms = Map<const Matrix3d>(xyz_to_lms_matrix) * ref_xyz;
87 Vector3d d65_lms = Map<const Matrix3d>(xyz_to_lms_matrix) *
88 (ref_xyz[1] * Vector3d(d65_X, d65_Y, d65_Z)); // d65_Y = 1.0.
90 double scale_l = d65_lms[0] / ref_lms[0];
91 double scale_m = d65_lms[1] / ref_lms[1];
92 double scale_s = d65_lms[2] / ref_lms[2];
94 return Vector3d(scale_l, scale_m, scale_s);
99 WhiteBalanceEffect::WhiteBalanceEffect()
100 : neutral_color(0.5f, 0.5f, 0.5f),
101 output_color_temperature(6500.0f)
103 register_vec3("neutral_color", (float *)&neutral_color);
104 register_float("output_color_temperature", &output_color_temperature);
107 string WhiteBalanceEffect::output_fragment_shader()
109 return read_file("white_balance_effect.frag");
112 void WhiteBalanceEffect::set_gl_state(GLuint glsl_program_num, const string &prefix, unsigned *sampler_num)
114 Matrix3d rgb_to_xyz_matrix = ColorspaceConversionEffect::get_xyz_matrix(COLORSPACE_sRGB);
115 Vector3d rgb(neutral_color.r, neutral_color.g, neutral_color.b);
116 Vector3d xyz = rgb_to_xyz_matrix * rgb;
117 Vector3d lms_scale = compute_lms_scaling_factors(xyz);
120 * Now apply the color balance. Simply put, we find the chromacity point
121 * for the desired white temperature, see what LMS scaling factors they
122 * would have given us, and then reverse that transform. For T=6500K,
123 * the default, this gives us nearly an identity transform (but only nearly,
124 * since the D65 illuminant does not exactly match the results of T=6500K);
125 * we normalize so that T=6500K really is a no-op.
127 Vector3d white_xyz = convert_color_temperature_to_xyz(output_color_temperature);
128 Vector3d lms_scale_white = compute_lms_scaling_factors(white_xyz);
130 Vector3d ref_xyz = convert_color_temperature_to_xyz(6500.0f);
131 Vector3d lms_scale_ref = compute_lms_scaling_factors(ref_xyz);
133 lms_scale[0] *= lms_scale_ref[0] / lms_scale_white[0];
134 lms_scale[1] *= lms_scale_ref[1] / lms_scale_white[1];
135 lms_scale[2] *= lms_scale_ref[2] / lms_scale_white[2];
138 * Concatenate all the different linear operations into a single 3x3 matrix.
139 * Note that since we postmultiply our vectors, the order of the matrices
140 * has to be the opposite of the execution order.
142 Matrix3d corr_matrix =
143 rgb_to_xyz_matrix.inverse() *
144 Map<const Matrix3d>(xyz_to_lms_matrix).inverse() *
145 lms_scale.asDiagonal() *
146 Map<const Matrix3d>(xyz_to_lms_matrix) *
148 set_uniform_mat3(glsl_program_num, prefix, "correction_matrix", corr_matrix);