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Hello, So the display, if calibrated correctly, should undo exactly the encoding with the inverse EOTF you imposed to the signal. Put another way, whatever you put in should be exactly what you get out. The main difference is that with SDR, you indeed need to multiply the input signal by the display peak luminance and with PQ, because it is absolute, you do not need to do anything. Without having access to the hardware it is tricky to find out what is going on. How did you determine the peak luminance in SDR? I would recommend using some patterns to verify that the EOTF track in both modes. For example, you can encode the attached file with the inverse EOTF, display it at 100% and verify that the checkerboard patterns blend with their background: |
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Hi,
I'm trying to compare the brightness between the following SDR and HDR monitors (Asus ProArt Display PA32UCG)
SDR monitor: color space sRGB, piece-wise sRGB EOTF, max brightness 140 cd/m2
HDR monitor: color space BT2020, PQ EOTF
The test pattern from http://www.lagom.nl/lcd-test/contrast.php
After ocio conversion calculation, I got the following input in 10-bit on the first 8 blocks.
An SDR example:
The outputs in cd/m2 I got from the calculation above is
However, visually SDR monitor is obviously darker than the HDR monitor.
Is the calculation of the monitor luminance correct?
If correct what could be the reason why the monitors look obviously different?
Thanks!
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