WG13 N 0009 - Rochester Institute of Technologyrycppr.cias.rit.edu/ISO/N009 GreyRepro_Metric_Tol.pdfISO/TC 130/WG13, Berlin, Germany 3/29/11! WG13 N 0009 . 2 Motivation • Harmonizing

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Printing Conformance Assessment – Harmonizing Grey Reproduction & Tolerances

Bob Chung, RIT March 28, 2011 ISO/TC 130/WG13, Berlin, Germany

3/29/11

WG13 N 0009

2

Motivation

•  Harmonizing conformance assessment activities is a major task for TC130/WG13.

•  The starting point for executing this task is interpreting the ‘shalls’ contained in the TC130’s standards.

–  Most aims are clearly defined. Grey Reproduction aims are the exception to this rule.

–  Tolerances are more challenging. The tolerances contained in TC130 standards share a number of limitations:

•  Within the body of TC130 standards, the metrics (ΔEab, ∆E00, ΔH, ∆Ch, etc.) used to set tolerances for similar aims lack consistency.

•  One tolerance is assumed to work in all applications, in spite of the fact some applications are substantially more color critical than others.

3

Background & Purpose

•  TC130/WG3 has overall responsibility for setting aims and tolerances in Graphic Arts standards.

–  New insights to overcoming the limitations of current aims and tolerances are evolving.

•  The purpose of this presentation is to: –  Present current work in the areas of Grey Reproduction and Tolerance

Harmonization.

–  Determine if WG13 feels this work could contribute to its mission of harmonizing assessment procedures.

–  Determine if WG13 believes we should seek the leadership of WG3 to incorporate these concepts into its portfolio of standards.

4

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Harmonizing Grey Reproduction

5

Grey Reproduction •  Solid tone and TVI control the behavior of individual

printing units.

•  Grey reproduction extends Solids & TVI control in several important ways:

–  It captures the impact of overprinting effects, i.e., ink transparency & trapping.

–  It includes the impact of paper color on printed neutrals.

•  For these reasons, grey reproduction is becoming an important process control parameter.

–  As the need to assess grey reproduction conformance increases, the limitations of current assessment methods are increasingly problematic.

6

Current Assessment Methods •  There are different approaches in specifying grey

reproduction conformity.

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7

Limitations of Current Methods

•  Current  methods  compare  printed  neutrals  using  predefined  triplets  to  theore5cal  grey  ramps.  

•  This  method  introduces  several  limita5ons:  1.  The  predefined  triplets  are  not  necessarily  neutral.  

2.  Conformance  to  the  theore5cal  grey  ramps  is  judged  qualita5vely  -­‐-­‐  there  are  no  numeric  tolerances.  

3.  The  assessment  of  neutral  appearance  is  limited  to  the  chroma5c  dimension  (a*,  b*),  not  L*  dimension.  

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8

Current Method – Version 1

•  Use  pre-­‐defined  triplet  device  values.  •  Measure  printed  patches  colorimetrically.  •  Plot  grey  reproduc5on  (a*/b*  vs  %Dot)  &  compare  to  

the  substrate-­‐based  grey  ramp  (SBGR)  as  done  by  IDEAlliance.  

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9

Current Method – Version 2

•  Grey  reproduc5on  may  be  ploVed  using  a*/b*  vs.  L*  as  proposed  in  ISO/WD  12647-­‐2  (2010).    •  Varia5on  of  prin5ng  are  expressed  as  non-­‐overlapping  data  points.  •  No  pass/fail  decision  because  there  are  no  colorimetric  aims.  

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10

Overcoming Limitations Using a Dataset

1.  Star5ng  from  pre-­‐defined  CMY  triplets.  

•  e.g.,  Media  Wedge,  P2P  

2.  Finding  their  colorimetric  aims  via  the  ICC  profile  of  the  target  dataset.  

•  e.g.,  ISO  Coated  v2,  GRACoL  (2006)  

•  Absolute  Colorimetric  Rendering  intent  

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11

Substrate-corrected Colorimetric Aims (SCCA)

3.  Use  tris5mulus  linear  equa5ons  in  ISO  13655  (Annex  A)  to  adjust  the  target  dataset  for  produc5on  stock.  –  This  method  works  for  any  color,  including  grey.  

Data  Set  (Paper_2)    

XYZ_2  –  to  –  LAB_2  •                                    •  •                                    •  •                                    •  

   

Data  Set  (Paper_1)    

LAB_1  –  to  –  XYZ_1  •                                    •  •                                    •  •                                    •  

 

Tris;mulus  Linear  Correc;on      

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12

Conformance Assessment with Dataset  4.  This  chart  shows  the  SCCA  in  terms  of  substrate  

corrected  grey  reproduc5on  aims.    –  Grey  reproduc5on  conformance  can  now  be  assessed  versus  the  

colorimetric  values  of  the  triplets,  not  just  based  on  the  paper  color.  

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-8

-6

-4

-2

0

2

4

6

8

0 10 20 30 40 50 60 70 80 90 100

a* b*

L*

a* b* Grey_a* Grey_b*

13

Conformance Assessment with Dataset 5.  Compare  measured  grey  reproduc5on  to  the  substrate-­‐

corrected  grey  reproduc5on  aims.  •  By  adop5ng  this  method,  we  can  introduce  quan5ta5ve  tolerances  for  

chroma5c  and  L*  errors.  •  Two  case  studies  demonstrate  how  the  use  of  SCCAs  overcomes  the  

limita5ons  of  current  conformance  assessment  methods.  

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14

Case Study I – Grey Reproduction

•  IDEAlliance  database  analysis  (Chung  &  Wang,  2011)  –  Filtered;  n  =  85;  23  triplets  

0 10 20 30 40 50 60 70 80 90 100−15

−10

−5

0

5

10

15

Dot area (%)

Mea

sure

d a* / b

*

Measured a*

Measured b*

Student Version of MATLAB

Measurement vs. %Dot

0 10 20 30 40 50 60 70 80 90 100−15

−10

−5

0

5

10

15

Dot area (%)

Mea

sure

d a* / b

* − A

im a

* / b*

Measured a* − Aim a*

Measured b* − Aim b*

Student Version of MATLAB

(Measurement – SCCA) vs. %Dot

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15

Case Study I – Grey Reproduction •  Paper color

–  Bluish paper (top row); Yellowish paper (bottom row)

•  Grey reproduction convergence –  Good convergence (left); Partial convergence (middle)

–  Poor convergence (right) is a function of ink set.

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16

•  ∆L* and ∆Ch are parameters describing the extent of the neutrality between substrate-corrected colorimetric aims (SCCA) and measurement of the triplets.

∆L* = L1* - L2*

L1, a1, and b1 are substrate-corrected colorimetric aims (SCCA). L2, a2, and b2 are measurements of the CMY triplets.

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Case Study I – Grey Reproduction

!Ch = a1 *!a2 *( )2 + b1 *!b2 *( )2

17

Grey Reproduction Conformance

•  Option 1 –  Compute weighted ∆Ch for all 23 triplets and determine pass/fail

based on the average not to exceed 1.5 ∆Ch and max not to exceed 3.0 ∆Ch.

•  Option 2 –  Grey reproduction conformance, based on 3 triplets, has 82%

agreement with Option 1 when the following tolerances are applied.

•  (25C 19M 19Y) at 2 ∆Ch

•  (50C 40M 40Y) at 3 ∆Ch

•  (75C 66M 66Y) at 4 ∆Ch

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18

Case Study II – Grey Reproduction

•  RIT PSA Survey database (Chung & Chen, 2011) –  Unfiltered; n = 35; 3 triplets

–  CRF of ∆L* & ∆Ch (quarter-tone, midtone & three quarter-tone)

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!!

19

Case Study I & II – Grey Reproduction

•  Summary –  Having predefined triplets, available from standard color control

targets, simplifies grey reproduction conformance assessment.

–  Three triplets, at quarter-tone, midtone and three quarter-tone, e.g., as specified in ISO/WD 12647-2 (2010), are sufficient for grey reproduction conformance assessment.

–  Standard-writing bodies can specify target colorimetric aims for these triplets from the target dataset.

–  End users can convert target colorimetric aims into Substrate-Corrected Colorimetric Aims for conformance assessment.

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20

3/29/11

Harmonizing Tolerances

21

Conceptual Framework

•  One of limitations in the tolerances contained in TC130 standards is that

–  One tolerance is assumed to work in all applications, in spite of the fact some applications are substantially more color critical and other applications are less.

•  Work conducted over the past three months has opened a path for overcoming these limitations.

22

Universal Tolerance Schema

* This schema assumes the use of substrate corrected colorimetric aims (SCCA) to overcome the limitations of target aims tied to standard paper types.

•  The consistency of tolerance metrics could be improved by adopting a universal tolerance schema.

•  To demonstrated the concept, we created this chart:

23

Conceptual Framework

•  Building on such a schema, it is possible to create a family of tolerances for each relevant aim.

–  Tolerances would range from relaxed to normal to stringent, designed to balance application needs and process capability.

•  Tolerances for grey reproduction (∆Ch, ∆L*) are good candidates for creating such a family. The table below illustrates the concept.

24

Conceptual Framework

•  Finally, the tolerance schema could be published as a separate standard.

•  Such a tolerance standard would allow other Graphic Arts Standards to focus on aims.

•  Standard specific aims could then be combined with relevant tolerances from the tolerance standard to provide the basis for conformance assessment.

25

Discussion

3/29/11

•  Does WG13:

–  Agree that clarifying Grey Reproduction and Harmonizing Tolerances could contribute to its mission of harmonizing assessment procedures?

–  Believe that it should seek the leadership of WG3 to incorporate these concepts into TC130’s portfolio of standards?

26

Robert Chung

Professor School of Print Media

RIT

Rochester, NY, USA

Phone: 585-475-2722

email: rycppr@rit.edu

3/29/11

Thanks for Listening

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