4.4 Article

Comparing Measures of Gamut Area

Journal

LEUKOS
Volume 15, Issue 1, Pages 29-53

Publisher

TAYLOR & FRANCIS INC
DOI: 10.1080/15502724.2018.1500485

Keywords

Color perception; color rendition; gamut area; TM-30

Funding

  1. U.S. Department of Energy's Solid-State Lighting Program, part of the Office of Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy

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This article examines how the color sample set, color space, and other calculation elements influence the quantification of gamut area. The IES TM-30-18 Gamut Index (R-g) serves as a baseline, with comparisons made to several other measures documented in scientific literature and 12 new measures formulated for this analysis using various components of existing measures. The results demonstrate that changes in the color sample set, color space, and calculation procedure can all lead to substantial differences in light source performance characterizations. It is impossible to determine the relative accuracy of any given measure outright, because gamut area is not directly correlated with any subjective quality of an illuminated environment. However, the utility of different approaches was considered based on the merits of individual components of the gamut area calculation and based on the ability of a measure to provide useful information within a complete system for evaluating color rendition. For gamut area measures, it is important to have a reasonably uniform distribution of color samples (or averaged coordinates) across hue angle-avoiding exclusive use of high-chroma samples-with sufficient quantity to ensure robustness but enough difference to avoid incidents of the hue-angle order of the samples varying between the test and reference conditions. It is also important to use a modern, uniform color space that is suitable for the quantification of color appearance and color difference.

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