can lab color space normalize?

10 Ansichten (letzte 30 Tage)
xiao
xiao am 1 Mai 2018
Kommentiert: xiao am 1 Mai 2018
as we all know, the range of lab color space is (0.100) (L), (-127,128) (A,B). so can I normalize them into (0,1) or any other range? and does it have any influence?

Akzeptierte Antwort

Guillaume
Guillaume am 1 Mai 2018
Bearbeitet: Guillaume am 1 Mai 2018
as we all know, the range of lab color space is ...
Not really, this is a convention but like all colour encoding you can use whatever range you wish as long as you define what that range is. The (-128, 127) range was chosen because that's the range of signed 8 bit integers.
While you can use whatever range you wish for your own processing, those matlab functions that expect L*a*b* values expect them to be in the conventional range (0,100) for L* and (-128, 127) for the others. These functions will not work properly if you use a different convention.
  3 Kommentare
Guillaume
Guillaume am 1 Mai 2018
Bearbeitet: Guillaume am 1 Mai 2018
As I said, you can use whatever range you want as long as you document it. In my opinion, (-1, 1) would make more sense for a* and b*.
Whether your represent maximum luminance as 100 or as 1, it is still maximum luminance. Whether pure red is -127 (on (-128,127)), 0 on (0,1) or -1 on (-1,1) it is still pure red. pure grey is either 0, 0.5, 0 respectively on these scales.
However, if you use functions that expect Lab values they most likely won't work with your custom range.
P.S.: standard range for a and b is (-128,127) not (-127, 128)
xiao
xiao am 1 Mai 2018
thank you !

Melden Sie sich an, um zu kommentieren.

Weitere Antworten (0)

Kategorien

Mehr zu Image Processing Toolbox finden Sie in Help Center und File Exchange

Community Treasure Hunt

Find the treasures in MATLAB Central and discover how the community can help you!

Start Hunting!

Translated by