Tag Archives: fechner

Smooth Gradients and the Weber-Fechner Fraction

Whether the human visual system perceives a displayed slow changing gradient of tones, such as a vast expanse of sky, as smooth or posterized depends mainly on two well known variables: the Weber-Fechner Fraction of the ‘steps’ in the reflected/produced light intensity (the subject of this article); and spatial dithering of the light intensity as a result of noise (the subject of a future one).

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How Many Bits to Fully Encode My Image

My camera sports a 14 stop Engineering Dynamic Range.  What bit depth do I need to safely fully encode all of the captured tones from the scene with a linear sensor?  As we will see the answer is not 14 bits because that’s the eDR, but it’s not too far from that either – for other reasons, as information science will show us in this article.

When photographers talk about grayscale ‘tones’ they typically refer to the number of distinct gray levels present in a displayed image.  They don’t want to see distinct levels in a natural slow changing gradient like a dark sky: if it’s smooth they want to perceive it as smooth when looking at their photograph.  So they want to make sure that all possible tonal  information from the scene has been captured and stored in the raw data by their imaging system.

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