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1
to Delivering High Quality Images in Medical
Monitors
Welcome!
2
Your Instructor Sencore contact
Scott Reardon
1-800-SENCORE www.sencore.com
3
About Sencore
  • Founded 1951
  • Located in Sioux Falls, SD
  • Leading manufacturer of innovative electronic
    test
    measurement equipment
  • Computer Monitor - high resolution computer
    monitor repair and calibration
  • Digital Video - MPEG-2/ATSC, MPEG-2/DVB, CCIR601
    Serial/Parallel, QAM, and HDTV
  • High Definition TV - demonstration, testing and
    calibration applications
  • Professional A/V - high-end video display
    calibration and sound system analysis, Home
    Theater
  • Medical - Safety Testers, Compliance Testers, and
    Analyzers, including SPO2 and Patient Simulators
  • Cable - RF distribution including CATV, MATV,
    satellite antenna systems QAM applications
  • Broadcast - broadcast and studio settings,
    especially digital video and MPEG-2 applications

4
Introduction
Medical Monitors Need Calibration!
  • Critical diagnoses depends on correct image
    display.
  • Incorrect white balance causes false color
    imaging.
  • Room lighting affects perceived color,
    brightness, and contrast.
  • Overdriven CRTs cause picture distortion.
  • Misadjusted User controls distort contrast and
    brightness ratios.
  • Small picture flaws are magnified on high
    resolution displays.
  • CRTs age - recheck calibration every 6 months

5
Introduction
Why Perform Video Calibration?
  • Displays are aligned on location after
    installation and moving is completed
  • Picture is optimized for room lighting conditions
  • Reduce Doctors complaints about the display
  • That it doesn't look right.
  • The red of the tissue doesn't look right.
  • The display is too dark or the display is too
    light.
  • The picture is blurry.
  • Assure the doctor that the image quality is
    correct
  • Produces full range of accurate colors
    grayscale
  • Telemedicine - displays need to be calibrated to
    match what is happening on site

6
Video Review - Producing an Image
CRT Operation
  • CRT gun (F1/F2, K, G1, G2) produces an electron
    beam
  • Electron beam is accelerated by high voltage
  • Phosphor screen gives off light when struck by
    electron beam

7
Video Review - Producing an Image
How do video displays make BW?
  • Changing bias (G1/K voltage) changes electron
    beam intensity
  • Higher bias less beam current less bias more
    beam current
  • Less beam current less light output more beam
    current more light output

No light output
Medium light output
Maximum light output
High bias
Medium bias
Low bias
8
Video Review - Producing an Image
  • White - all phosphor producing light
  • Black - no phosphor producing light
  • Contrast ratio - difference between black level
    and white level
  • Ambient light affects contrast ratio

9
Video Review - Producing an Image
  • Level of video signal corresponds to CRT gun
    conduction brightness
  • Brightness (luminance) average DC level
  • Contrast (difference between bright/dark
    portions) peak-to-peak amplitude
  • Video signal levels specified in IRE

10
Video Review - Producing Color
How do video displays make color?
  • Color CRTs use three electron guns
  • Each gun is fed a separate video signal (RGB)
  • Red Green Blue white

11
Video Review - Producing Color
No light output
  • Changing bias of all three guns equally produces
    shades of gray
  • Neutral gray is call White Balance
  • Good color tracking maintains neutral gray at
    all luminance levels

High bias
Medium light output
Maximum light output
Medium bias
Low bias
12
Video Review - Video Signals
13
Video Review - Signal Types
Composite Video vs.
S-Video (Y/C)
  • Composite video contains luminance, chrominance,
    and sync on the same signal line.
  • S-Video (Y/C) contains luminance and sync on one
    signal line, with chrominance on a second signal
    line.

14
Video Review - Signal Types
Advantages of S-video connection over composite
(RCA) connector
  • Separates luminance information from color
    information to increase BW resolution
  • Fewer artifacts with modern video sources like
    DSS and DVD

15
Video Review - Signal Types
Advantage of Component vs. S-video
  • Increased color resolution

16
Video Review - Signal Types
Advantage of RGB over component
  • RGB signals correspond directly to the CRT guns /
    light sources
  • Provides best possible picture quality for analog
    CRT displays

HDTV uses component rather than RGB
  • Requires less bandwidth
  • More content can be stored on a DVD or broadcast.

17
Video Review - Signal Types
Advantage of DVI vs. Component
  • DVI is digital equivalent of analog RGB
  • DVI better for fixed pixel (non-CRT) displays
    connected to digital sources (DVD, digital cable
    set top converter, video games)
  • Removes unnecessary analog-digital-analog
    conversion - enables pure digital signal to
    display
  • DVI has bandwidth to address each pixel in a
    digital TV display individually - enabling the
    highest possible picture quality
  • Component better for analog (CRT) displays -
    analog has theoretically better color and
    luminance range

18
Video Review - Formats
19
Video Review - Resolution
  • Measure of maximum number of light to dark
    transitions produced horizontally or vertically
  • Horizontal resolution usually expressed in pixels
  • Vertical resolution expressed in pixels or lines

20
Video Review - Scanning
Interlace Scanning
  • Requires 2 vertical deflection cycles to display
    a complete frame
  • Vertical Jitter
  • Achieves Higher resolution with lower bandwidth
  • Not used in high resolution monitors

2 Fields (interlaced)
1 Frame


21
Video Review - Scanning
Progressive Scanning
  • Scans every vertical line every frame.
  • Helps prevents fast motion artifacts.
  • No vertical jitter

1 Frame
22
Light Color Theory
  • Light is electromagnetic energy within a narrow
    range of frequencies
  • Each different wavelength of light energy (if
    seen alone) is perceived by the human eye/brain
    as a different, fully saturated, color

23
Light Color Theory
  • If light from the sun is equally reflected from a
    surface, the eye/brain sees the surface as white.
  • If a surface absorbs all light energy and
    reflects none, the surface appears black.

24
Light Color Theory
  • If more than one wavelength is reflected, the
    eye/brain performs a mixing of all light energy
    present and perceives a single color which is a
    result of the mixture.

25
Human Vision
  • Eye is tri-stimulus - sees light using red,
    green, blue receptors
  • Each receptor has a different response to the
    light spectrum
  • CIE Standard Observer Response Curve shows
    average response of each receptor across light
    spectrum

26
Human Vision
Three characteristics define how our eye/brain
sees light
27
Human Vision
  • Hue Dominant wavelength, color or tint of the
    color.

28
Human Vision
  • Saturation Degree of purity from light of other
    wavelengths
  • (zero saturation white equal energy of all
    wavelengths)

29
Human Vision
  • Brightness Perceived light energy level

30
Light Color Measurement
  • Light Measurement Units
  • Luminance (brightness)
  • Footlambert U.S. unit of luminance (radiated
    light), 1 lumen per square foot
  • Nit (cd/m2) S.I. unit of luminance (radiated
    light), 1 candela per square meter

Illuminance ambient light that illuminates the
display contributes to luminance that is
observed from the image display reduces the
contrast in the image need to block from
measurement
31
Light Color Measurement
  • Light Measurement Units
  • Color (hue and saturation)
  • CIE chromaticity coordinates (x,y) From 1931 CIE
    Chromaticity Diagram (Kelly Chart)

What color?
32
Color Measurement
CIE Chromaticity Diagram
  • Graphically depicts the relationship between hue
    and saturation.
  • Diagram shows the pure spectral colors around the
    curved border
  • The results of mixing any of these spectral
    colors are shown at the base and center of the
    diagram.

33
Color Measurement
How do video displays make white?
  • By combining the proper mix of RGB
  • All three guns are turned on to make white

34
Color Measurement
  • C.I.E. coordinate x 0.313 y 0.329 (D) is the
    white color which was chosen as the standard
    white reference for all video display systems.
    (D6500)

35
Color Measurement
How do video displays make black?
  • All three guns are turned off to make black.
  • The same point on the chart represents white and
    black

36
Color Measurement
How do video displays make color?
  • Using RGB light sources
  • Any three colors not lying on a straight line
    with one another are color primaries.
  • The points shown are the NTSC specified CRT
    phosphor color primaries for US televisions.
  • The connecting triangle encloses the range of
    colors able to be produced by a CRT using these
    color phosphors.

37
Color Measurement
Color Temperature
  • Color Temperature is sometimes also used to
    specify different near-white colors.
  • Color Temperature is referenced to color of
    carbon when heated to different temperatures
    (measured in Kelvin -- Celsius plus 273).

38
Color Measurement
  • Different whitescorrespond to different color
    temperatures
  • White sheet of paper looks different under
    different light
  • CRT radiates light so color temperature not
    affected by lighting conditions (but brightness
    and contrast are)

39
Color Measurement
  • There is an approximate correlation between color
    temperature and CIE chromaticity
  • Accurate calibration is done using CIE coordinates

40
Color Measurement
  • Colors which are created by heating carbon form a
    continuous line across the CIE Chromaticity
    Diagram - known as the black body curve.
  • Only colors exactly on the curve are specified by
    original absolute color temperature.

41
Calibration Overview
1. Calibrate Display Geometry
  • Size
  • Centering
  • Pincushion
  • Trapezoid
  • Rotation
  • Linearity

42
Calibration Overview
2. Calibrate Display Convergence
  • Precisely overlay red, green, and blue images at
    all points on display.
  • Eliminate all color fringing effects.

43
Calibration Overview
3. Calibrate Display White Balance
  • Use color analyzer to measure color of white in
    center white window at high and low luminance
    levels

44
Calibration Overview
4. Calibrate Display User Controls
  • Brightness (Black Level)
  • Contrast (White Level)
  • Color (Saturation)
  • Tint (Hue)
  • Sharpness

45
Video Generator
Introducing the VP400 401 VideoPro
The VP400 401 VideoPro Multimedia video
generators deliver the HDTV, NTSC, RGB, DVI RF
Video Signals You Need for Accurate Service
Alignments of Monitors Direct View Displays.
46
Video Generator
DVI (VP401)
NTSC RF (VP401)
Battery operated (8 hours)
Component/RGB VESA/HDTV
Composite
S-Video
47
SMPTE Bar
Video Generator
Check and adjust color level and hue controls.
Check color demodulator accuracy.
48
Video Generator
Color Bar
Check for primary (red, green, blue) and
secondary (cyan, magenta, yellow) colors to
confirm proper chroma processing.
49
Decoder Check
Video Generator
75 white reference
75 saturated color level
0
5
10
20
15
25
-25
20
-10
-15
-5
Check color decoder/matrix circuit to determine
if any red or green color emphasis (push) or
de-emphasis. The 0 center bar of each color as
viewed through its respective color filter should
be the same intensity as the 75 reference white.
50
Decoder Adjust
Video Generator
75 white reference
Primary color sections
Secondary color bars
Set color decoder/matrix circuits for accurate
color. View color primary through color filter
adjust chroma gain to match intensity of white
bar and surrounding color. Adjust chroma hue to
match intensity of secondary color bars.Blue
section set User Menu Color Hue
controls. Red green sections set Service
controls
51
Video Generator
Focus
Check for proper static dynamic focus operation
at screen center edges.
52
Converge
Video Generator
Converge display over entire picture area. The
red, green and blue segments should form straight
lines of equal thickness. The line intersections
show steps from the straight ideal converged
lines.
53
Crosshatch (43)
Video Generator
Check and adjust convergence and linearity.
54
Linearity
Video Generator
Check and adjust deflection linearity, set
geometry controls, color convergence adjustments.
55
Anamorphic
Video Generator
Check accuracy of widescreen stretch feature
(from 43 to 169).
56
Overscan
Video Generator
5 overscan (green line)
10 overscan (red line)
electrical center
Check and adjust display geometry, including
picture centering, size, trapezoid (keystone)
correction, pincushion (bow) correction, and
linearity.
57
Video Generator
Staircase
Check video amplifier linearity and gray scale
tracking. Adjust G2 (screen) control to proper
setting.
58
Horizontal Staircase
Video Generator
Check gray scale tracking of CRT projectors with
red and blue overdrive on sides of screen.
59
Pluge (Picture Line-Up Generator Equipment)
Video Generator
Black
10 IRE
Alternating
Check for proper black level (brightness) and
white level (contrast) setup. Includes
alternating black/blacker-than-black section.
60
Video Generator
Needle
Check for Sweep Velocity Modulation (SVM)
operation, high voltage regulation, and setting
Contrast Brightness on CRT displays.
61
Video Generator
Ramp
Visual check of grayscale tracking. Poor
performance causes visual color tint at one or
more light levels. Checks digitizing linearity of
video signal processors. Poor performance causes
vertical bands.
62
Window
Video Generator
Check chromaticity with color analyzer.
Adjustable IRE level window with pluge bars to
monitor black level.
63
Video Generator
Regulate
Black / White alternating
1 pixel wide
Check high voltage and scan current regulation.
64
Video Generator
Raster
Check purity white balance. Includes adjustable
0-100 IRE levels. Color can be gated on/off to
produce red, green, blue, cyan, magenta yellow
raster.
65
Checker
Video Generator
Check for regulation of low voltage supply to
video amps and video ringing. Should see sharp
vertical lines with no video ringing.
66
Lo-Hi Tracking
Video Generator
0 (black)
2.5
- 4IRE (blacker than black)
5
97.5
100 (white)
95
Set Contrast Brightness on fixed-pixel
(non-CRT) displays. Increase brightness to see
black (-4 IRE) vertical bar, then decrease until
bar just disappears. Increase brightness control
if needed to make 2.5 and 5 boxes both visible.
Set contrast so 95 and 97.5 boxes are visible.
67
Video Generator
Multiburst
Check for ringing, smearing, and sharp
resolution. Increase Sharpness control until all
bursts are equal brightness without ghosting.
68
Video Generator
Sharpness
Clear, same brightness
Straight, same width
No blooming
Align controls that artificially enhance picture
transitions (contrast, picture, aperture,
scan-velocity modulation). SVM - bottom center
vertical lines straight same width, set for
least impact on width of black lines compared to
white lines. Contrast/Picture/Aperture - sharp
B/W transitions, white edges not blurred or
blooming, no ghosting, clear, bright multiburst.
69
Color Calibration
  • Different display types produce different light
    spectrums
  • Our eyes still see the same result
  • To provide accurate measurements Colorimeter must
    use CIE standard observer filters that replicate
    eye response
  • What worked for CRTs doesnt work for other
    display types

70
Color Calibration
  • Colorimeter is a tri-stimulus measurement device
  • Filters and light sensors to separate light into
    R,G B
  • Output voltages proportional to applied light

71
Color Calibration
CP5000 Color Analyzer
CP5001 ColorPro Color Analyzer
  • Accurate method to set white balance (set to
    industry specs for best video display
    performance)
  • Objective test (measure light produced by
    display)
  • Easy to use and interpret (x-y and RGB bar
    graphs)
  • CP500x accurate for all display types
  • NIST traceable

CP5000 ColorPro Color Analyzer
72
Color Calibration
ColorPro Analyzer overview
  • Probe connects to PCs serial or USB port or
    Pocket PC
  • Select standard preset white references, or input
    custom setting
  • Flexible refresh rate synchronization for testing
    at a fixed display format or to follow changing
    formats.
  • Luminance measured in units of nits or
    footlamberts.

73
Color Calibration
ColorPro Analyzer overview
  • Delta RGB analog bar graph - quick adjustment of
    cutoff and drive controls
  • Selectable color reference
  • Change resolution for fine touchup adjustments

74
Color Calibration
ColorPro Analyzer overview
  • Chromaticity diagram display provides quick
    visualization of control interaction
  • Center target defines selected white reference
    color coordinates
  • Measurement cursor color steering lines track
    control adjustments

75
Color Calibration
ColorPro Analyzer overview
  • Calibration Report printout provides
    documentation re-calibration reference
  • Pre-and post-calibration performance easily
    documented
  • Standard or extended form tracks display at high
    low luminance, or at multiple luminance points
    (ISF)

76
Color Calibration
ColorPro Analyzer overview
Identifies when next calibration is due
Documentation that display is optimized
Shows before and after color temperatures
77
Color Calibration
Calibration Library- On-line library of digital
service menu adjustment codes available to
ColorPro owners to simplify white balance
calibration without service literature.
78
White Balance/Gray-Scale Tracking Overview
White Balance Calibration
  • Accurate image colors are only possible when
    white balance is correct tracks accurately from
    black to white.
  • White balance is produced at all luminance levels
    when
  • 1) RGB sources/CRT guns balanced/biased to
    produce desired white reference at darkest gray
  • 2) RGB video amplifiers have correct gain
    linearity to produce desired white reference at
    all luminance levels from black to gray to white
  • Brightness control adjusts light level of the
    darkest parts of picture (should be called black
    level control)
  • Contrast control adjusts light level of the
    brightest picture parts (should be called
    brightness control).

79
White Balance/Gray-Scale Tracking Overview -
continued
White Balance Calibration
  • Brightness Contrast controls affect RGB output
    equally and do not affect the white balance of
    dark or bright picture portions
  • If the displays gray scale doesnt track
    accurately adjusting brightness or contrast
    controls produces a noticeable color shift due to
    the luminance level change

Normal
Lower Luminance Poor tracking
Lower Luminance Good tracking
80
White Balance - preliminary setup
White Balance Calibration
  • 1. Display the Pluge, Window, or Staircase
    pattern.

81
Pluge Pattern
Black
10 IRE
alternating 0/7.5 IRE
82
White Balance - preliminary setup
White Balance Calibration
  • 2. With the contrast control set to approximately
    3/4 of full scale, adjust the brightness control
    for proper display of black in the Pluge or
    Window pattern (for the Staircase pattern, make
    the first bar black and the second bar just
    barely visible).

83
White Balance - preliminary setup - CRT displays
White Balance Calibration
3. Display the Needle pattern. 4. Adjust the
contrast control for maximum brightness with no
signs of blooming in the maximum white bar of the
gray scale or raster distortion of the needle
pulses.
84
White Balance - preliminary setup - Fixed pixel
displays
White Balance Calibration
3. Display the Lo-Hi Tracking pattern. 4. Adjust
Contrast control as high as possible without
white clipping or compression.
97.5
100 (white)
95
85
White Balance Calibration
White Balance
  • Color Tracking Adjustment Controls
  • Cutoff/Bias controls adjust color balance at low
    luminance levels.
  • Gain/Drive controls adjust color balance at high
    luminance levels.

Gain/Drive Controls
Cutoff/Bias Controls
86
(No Transcript)
87
White Balance Calibration
  • 1. Determine the white reference/CIE chromaticity
    coordinates to which the display is to be
    adjusted.
  • Note Most displays should be adjusted to the CIE
    D65 daylight standard (x 0.313, y 0.329).
    This is the NTSC and ATSC white reference
    standard.

88
White Balance Calibration
2. Display a 20 or 30 IRE white window pattern on
the monitor (1 lumen - just enough light to get a
reading). Note If starting from scratch after a
CRT or other video component replacement, preset
the displays drive (gain) controls for maximum
brightness and the cutoff (bias) controls for
minimum brightness.
89
White Balance Calibration
3. Leaving the cutoff control for the initially
strongest color (as viewed on the dim CRT) at its
original or preset level, adjust the other two
cutoff controls to obtain color balance at the
desired white reference.
90
White Balance Calibration
4. Select a 80-100 IRE level window pattern. 5.
Leave the drive control for the initially weakest
color (as viewed on the bright CRT) at its
original or preset level, and adjust the other
two drive controls to again obtain color balance
at the desired white reference.
91
White Balance Calibration
6. Repeat steps 2-5 until the displays color
temperature remains relatively constant (tracks)
over the full range of IRE levels or contrast
control adjustment.
92
Calibrating User Controls
When the color temperature is calibrated perform
final adjustment of the User controls at typical
ambient lighting.
CRT Displays 1. Brightness (black Level) 2.
Sharpness/Enhancement 3. Contrast (white Level
) 4. Color 5. Hue/Tint
Fixed Pixel Displays 1. Brightness Contrast 2.
Sharpness/Enhancement 3. Color 4. Hue/Tint
93
Brightness Control
  • Brightness control adjusts light level of the
    back or darkest luminance portions of the
    picture.
  • If set too dark
  • subtle dark gray details of the scene are lost to
    black
  • If set too bright
  • darkest grays and deep blacks are all a lighter
    gray, which effectively lowers the contrast ratio
    of the display and reduces picture quality

94
Contrast Control
  • Contrast control adjusts light level of the white
    or high luminance portions of a scene.
  • Sometimes labeled picture control - should be
    labeled white level control
  • If set too low
  • picture image is dim, whites become dull image
    loses its luster because the contrast ratio is
    too low.
  • If set too high (this is often the factory
    setting)
  • power supply may be overdriven causing raster
    distortion
  • may cause pixel blooming (occurs when the screen
    pixels are struck so hard that light spreads to
    the adjacent pixels, defocusing the white image)

95
Enhancement Controls - (Sharpness, Picture,
Aperture, Scan Velocity Modulation)
  • Artificially enhance picture transitions between
    black white
  • Recommend turning SVM off

96
Calibrating User Controls
Brightness Control - CRT displays 1. Select
VP300 Pluge pattern. 2. Watch second box from the
inside (alternating between 7.5 IRE/black 0
IRE/blacker-than-black). 3. Adjust the control
until the 7.5 IRE 0 IRE levels appear the same
and no flashing can be seen. The outer 10 IRE box
should still be slightly visible.
97
Calibrating User Controls
Brightness Control - Fixed Pixel displays 1.
Select VideoPros Lo-Hi Tracking pattern. 2.
Increase brightness to see black (-4 IRE)
vertical bar, then decrease until bar just
disappears.
0 (black)
- 4IRE (blacker than black)
97.5
100 (white)
95
98
Calibrating User Controls
Brightness Control - Fixed Pixel displays 3.
Increase the Brightness control if needed to make
2.5 and 5 boxes both visible. 4. Set contrast
so 95 and 97.5 boxes are visible.
2.5
0 (black)
5
- 4IRE (blacker than black)
97.5
100 (white)
95
99
Calibrating User Controls
Sharpness/Enhancement Controls - Fixed Pixel
CRT displays
  • 1. Select the VideoPros Sharpness pattern.
  • 2. Adjust sharpness control while watching the
    bottom vertical lines. Set for best balance
    between ghosting and poor focus.
  • too high - faint ghosting beside line
  • too low - appears out of focus and lost
    resolution

Straight, same width, no ghosting
100
Calibrating User Controls
Sharpness/Enhancement Controls - Fixed Pixel
CRT displays
3. If the top multiburst section becomes too dull
or unclear increase the Sharpness control for the
best compromise
Clear, same brightness
101
Calibrating User Controls
Contrast Control - CRT Displays
  • 1. Select VideoPros Needle Pulse pattern.
  • 2. Watch the vertical lines as you adjust the
    contrast
  • top white bar is same width as 4 gray bars below
  • vertical lines are straight.
  • If contrast is too high, needle pulses will bend
    boxes bloom
  • 3. Recheck Brightness control setting and
    readjust if needed.

same width (no blooming)
Straight (no raster distortion)
102
Calibrating User Controls
Color Level Control 1. Select SMPTE Color Bars
pattern. 2. View pattern with blue filter, paying
attention to large top outside blue white bars,
and small bars below them. 3. Adjust Color
control to make these bars appear to have the
same intensity (brightness) level. 4. Remove blue
filter and view yellow red bars. They should be
very colorful without blooming into adjacent bars.
103
Calibrating User Controls
Tint Control 1. Select SMPTE Color Bars
pattern. 2. View pattern with blue filter, paying
attention to the Cyan/Magenta bars that are
located above and below one another. 3. Adjust
Tint/Hue control to make these bars appear to
have the same intensity (brightness) level.
104
Color, Hue and Decoder/matrix
  • Use if display has 2 User Controls and color
    Service Adjustments (RYR/red gain, RYB/red
    hue, GYR/green gain, GYB/green hue)
  • Set color decoder/matrix circuits for accurate
    color.

Decoder Adjust
105
75 white reference
Primary color sections
Secondary color bars
1. View color primary through color filter
adjust chroma gain to match intensity of white
bar and surrounding color. Blue section set
User Menu Color Hue controls. Red green
sections set Service controls (RYR/red gain,
RYB/red hue, GYR/green
gain, GYB/green hue) 2. Adjust chroma hue to
match intensity of secondary color bars in each
color block.
106
  • Benefits of a Properly Calibrated Video Display
  • Displays a sharper-focused, full resolution
    image.
  • Shows full detail in both the darkest brightest
    parts of all scenes.
  • Is properly matched to the viewing environment.
  • Produces a full range of accurate colors,
    including flesh tones.
  • Minimizes picture artifacts (distortions)
  • Satisfied user

107
DICOM Overview
Imagine the following
A trauma patient is admitted at an outpatient
clinic or rural clinic at a remote location.
Several X-rays are taken and sent to a hospital
for consultation.
108
DICOM Overview
How can we make sure that what the physician sees
at the clinic matches what is being displayed on
the radiologist softcopy workstation at the
hospital?
?
?
?
?
109
DICOM - Overview
The image is also sent to another radiologist for
a second opinion. This radiologist has a
diagnostic viewing station from another vendor -
a different monitor and video display card. As a
matter of fact, he has a new flat panel display
instead of a conventional CRT. How do we make
sure that the image again looks identical?
?
?
?
?
?
110
DICOM - Overview
  • Everyone misses something among the myriads of
    pixels that are tape archived for colleagues and
    lawyers to examine with 20/20 hindsight vision.
  • Perhaps the missed findings were apparent in the
    image data, but a once-new PACS monitor had lost
    its ability to display those subtle differences.
  • How can you know? What will you say when they ask
    what steps you took to assure that the display
    equipment you used was up to par?

111
DICOM - Overview
A digital signal from an image can be measured,
characterized, transmitted, and reproduced
objectively and accurately. However, the visual
interpretation of that signal is dependent on the
varied characteristics of the systems displaying
that image. Without a standard images produced
by the same signal may have completely different
visual appearance, information, and
characteristics on different display devices. In
medical imaging it is important that there be a
visual consistency in how a given digital image
appears, whether viewed, for example, on the
display monitor of a workstation or as a film on
a light-box.
excerpts taken from the Forward to Digital
Imaging and Communications in Medicine
(DICOM) Part 14 Grayscale Standard Display
Function
112
DICOM - Overview
  • These issues are addressed the Digital Imaging
    and Communications in Medicine (DICOM) standard
    (PS 3.14-2003)
  • Part 14 of this standard deals with grayscale
    consistency.
  • Jointly developed by American College of
    Radiology (ACR) National Electrical
    Manufacturers Association (NEMA)
  • Standard method for transferring images and
    associated information
  • Allows images to be displayed consistently on
    different softcopy and hardcopy devices
  • devices manufactured by various vendors
  • devices having different technologies (CRT, LCD)
  • devices with different characteristics (max.
    Brightness and/or Density)
  • different ambient light environments.

113
DICOM - Display Gamma
CRT and LCD monitors have a fixed power-law
relationship between output luminance and input
drive signal (gamma) of about 2.5 output
luminance input drive2.5 Signals applied to
CRTs LCD require an inverse gamma offset to
counteract the displays gamma This
correction produces a linear relationship between
the driving signal and resulting light output
114
DICOM - Display Gamma
  • Our eye-brain detection system is not linear
  • much less sensitive in the blacks than in the
    whites
  • why map all black values into luminance changes
    to display on the monitor when we cant notice
    the differences between small black value
    changes?
  • DDL values of darker areas mapped into large
    luminance increments
  • DDL values of whiter areas mapped to smaller
    luminance increments
  • Resulting curve is standardized as the DICOM
    Grayscale Standard Display Function (GSDF)

Digital Driving Level (DDL) digital value
applied to a Display System to produce a
luminance output
115
DICOM - Perceptual Linearization
  • GSDF produces a display function that matches the
    perceptual characteristics of our eyes
  • Just-Noticeable Difference (JND) - smallest
    luminance change that an average person can just
    perceive (approximately 256 shades of gray)
  • Perceptually linearized display - equal changes
    in driving levels produce perceptually equivalent
    changes in luminance across the entire luminance
    range.
  • Most digital radiologic images display 256 shades
    of gray - the approximate maximum number of Just
    Noticeable Differences that we can perceive

116
DICOM - Perceptual Linearization
Equal steps in perceived brightness represent
equal steps in the acquired image data
Different change in absolute luminance
Same number of Just Noticeable Difference same
perceived contrast
117
DICOM - Perceptual Linearization
118
DICOM - Perceptual Linearization
  • GSDF provides a way to standardize image
    displayed on monitors having different inherent
    brightness and response curves
  • Used to recalibrate monitors whose luminance and
    response curves have changed over time
  • Simply calibrate the monitor printers according
    to this curve
  • Calibration requires luminance meter that can be
    placed on the monitor sothe light output
    (luminance) can be measured at multiple digital
    driving levels (DDLs) / luminance levels
  • Luminance meter output is compared with the
    actual Grayscale Standard Display Function (GSDF)
    and differences can be calculated and saved
  • A corrective transfer function is then loaded
    directly to the video display controller

119
DICOM - Color Lookup Table
  • Video Card Look Up Table
  • Digitized images are made up of a matrix of
    pixels, each possessing at least three
    dimensions two (or more) spatial and one
    intensity value. The quantized dimensions are
    stored on the computer as a file of binary
    numbers.
  • In order to see the image on the computer
    monitor, the image pixel values must be mapped,
    one-to-one, to screen pixel values, via a Look Up
    Table (LUT). The LUT transfer function determines
    what screen values correspond to image pixel
    intensity values at all coordinates in the image.

120
DICOM - Color Lookup Table
  • If each image intensity value is mapped to its
    corresponding screen value the LUT is a linear
    function and can be graphed as a 45 straight
    line.
  • By modifying the slope of the transfer function
    and screen mapping, LUT image intensity values
    may be selectively increased or decreased to
    perceptually equalize luminance steps in the image

121
DICOM - Calibrating Displays
  • Procedure for Calibrating Gray scale (BW)
    Monitors
  • Calibrate each monitor regularly
  • Calibrate under normal viewing lighting
    conditions
  • Adjust monitor contrast and brightness
    before/during calibration and never again
  • Calibrate with always the same background
    intensity (about 20, or a value comparable to
    the average intensity emitted from the monitor)
  • Calibrate to match the standard display function
    (DICOM)

122
Questions?
Remember
Your Sencore contact
Scott Reardon
1-800-SENCORE www.sencore.com
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