US9270958B2 - Liquid crystal display apparatus for generating an output video signal based on an input video signal and a lighting signal - Google Patents

Liquid crystal display apparatus for generating an output video signal based on an input video signal and a lighting signal Download PDF

Info

Publication number
US9270958B2
US9270958B2 US13/181,765 US201113181765A US9270958B2 US 9270958 B2 US9270958 B2 US 9270958B2 US 201113181765 A US201113181765 A US 201113181765A US 9270958 B2 US9270958 B2 US 9270958B2
Authority
US
United States
Prior art keywords
signal
video signal
pixel
sub
liquid crystal
Prior art date
Legal status (The legal status is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the status listed.)
Active, expires
Application number
US13/181,765
Other versions
US20120026211A1 (en
Inventor
Ken Kikuchi
Tomoya Yano
Current Assignee (The listed assignees may be inaccurate. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation or warranty as to the accuracy of the list.)
Sony Corp
Original Assignee
Sony Corp
Priority date (The priority date is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the date listed.)
Filing date
Publication date
Application filed by Sony Corp filed Critical Sony Corp
Assigned to SONY CORPORATION reassignment SONY CORPORATION ASSIGNMENT OF ASSIGNORS INTEREST (SEE DOCUMENT FOR DETAILS). Assignors: YANO, TOMOYA, KIKUCHI, KEN
Publication of US20120026211A1 publication Critical patent/US20120026211A1/en
Application granted granted Critical
Publication of US9270958B2 publication Critical patent/US9270958B2/en
Active legal-status Critical Current
Adjusted expiration legal-status Critical

Links

Images

Classifications

    • HELECTRICITY
    • H04ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
    • H04NPICTORIAL COMMUNICATION, e.g. TELEVISION
    • H04N9/00Details of colour television systems
    • H04N9/64Circuits for processing colour signals
    • H04N9/67Circuits for processing colour signals for matrixing
    • GPHYSICS
    • G09EDUCATION; CRYPTOGRAPHY; DISPLAY; ADVERTISING; SEALS
    • G09GARRANGEMENTS OR CIRCUITS FOR CONTROL OF INDICATING DEVICES USING STATIC MEANS TO PRESENT VARIABLE INFORMATION
    • G09G3/00Control arrangements or circuits, of interest only in connection with visual indicators other than cathode-ray tubes
    • G09G3/20Control arrangements or circuits, of interest only in connection with visual indicators other than cathode-ray tubes for presentation of an assembly of a number of characters, e.g. a page, by composing the assembly by combination of individual elements arranged in a matrix no fixed position being assigned to or needed to be assigned to the individual characters or partial characters
    • G09G3/34Control arrangements or circuits, of interest only in connection with visual indicators other than cathode-ray tubes for presentation of an assembly of a number of characters, e.g. a page, by composing the assembly by combination of individual elements arranged in a matrix no fixed position being assigned to or needed to be assigned to the individual characters or partial characters by control of light from an independent source
    • G09G3/36Control arrangements or circuits, of interest only in connection with visual indicators other than cathode-ray tubes for presentation of an assembly of a number of characters, e.g. a page, by composing the assembly by combination of individual elements arranged in a matrix no fixed position being assigned to or needed to be assigned to the individual characters or partial characters by control of light from an independent source using liquid crystals
    • G09G3/3607Control arrangements or circuits, of interest only in connection with visual indicators other than cathode-ray tubes for presentation of an assembly of a number of characters, e.g. a page, by composing the assembly by combination of individual elements arranged in a matrix no fixed position being assigned to or needed to be assigned to the individual characters or partial characters by control of light from an independent source using liquid crystals for displaying colours or for displaying grey scales with a specific pixel layout, e.g. using sub-pixels
    • GPHYSICS
    • G09EDUCATION; CRYPTOGRAPHY; DISPLAY; ADVERTISING; SEALS
    • G09GARRANGEMENTS OR CIRCUITS FOR CONTROL OF INDICATING DEVICES USING STATIC MEANS TO PRESENT VARIABLE INFORMATION
    • G09G2320/00Control of display operating conditions
    • G09G2320/06Adjustment of display parameters
    • G09G2320/0626Adjustment of display parameters for control of overall brightness
    • G09G2320/0646Modulation of illumination source brightness and image signal correlated to each other
    • GPHYSICS
    • G09EDUCATION; CRYPTOGRAPHY; DISPLAY; ADVERTISING; SEALS
    • G09GARRANGEMENTS OR CIRCUITS FOR CONTROL OF INDICATING DEVICES USING STATIC MEANS TO PRESENT VARIABLE INFORMATION
    • G09G2340/00Aspects of display data processing
    • G09G2340/06Colour space transformation
    • GPHYSICS
    • G09EDUCATION; CRYPTOGRAPHY; DISPLAY; ADVERTISING; SEALS
    • G09GARRANGEMENTS OR CIRCUITS FOR CONTROL OF INDICATING DEVICES USING STATIC MEANS TO PRESENT VARIABLE INFORMATION
    • G09G2360/00Aspects of the architecture of display systems
    • G09G2360/16Calculation or use of calculated indices related to luminance levels in display data
    • GPHYSICS
    • G09EDUCATION; CRYPTOGRAPHY; DISPLAY; ADVERTISING; SEALS
    • G09GARRANGEMENTS OR CIRCUITS FOR CONTROL OF INDICATING DEVICES USING STATIC MEANS TO PRESENT VARIABLE INFORMATION
    • G09G3/00Control arrangements or circuits, of interest only in connection with visual indicators other than cathode-ray tubes
    • G09G3/20Control arrangements or circuits, of interest only in connection with visual indicators other than cathode-ray tubes for presentation of an assembly of a number of characters, e.g. a page, by composing the assembly by combination of individual elements arranged in a matrix no fixed position being assigned to or needed to be assigned to the individual characters or partial characters
    • G09G3/34Control arrangements or circuits, of interest only in connection with visual indicators other than cathode-ray tubes for presentation of an assembly of a number of characters, e.g. a page, by composing the assembly by combination of individual elements arranged in a matrix no fixed position being assigned to or needed to be assigned to the individual characters or partial characters by control of light from an independent source
    • G09G3/3406Control of illumination source

Definitions

  • the present disclosure relates to a liquid crystal display apparatus having a sub-pixel structure made up of sub-pixels of four colors of red (R), green (G), blue (B), and white (W), for example.
  • an active-matrix liquid crystal display (LCD) apparatus in which TFT (Thin Film Transistor) is disposed in each pixel is often used.
  • a video signal is line-sequentially written to a subsidiary capacitive device and a liquid crystal device of each pixel from the upper portion to the lower portion of the screen, thereby driving each pixel.
  • each of pixels in a liquid crystal display panel includes sub-pixels of four colors (see Japanese Examined Patent Application Publication No. Hei 4-54207, Japanese Unexamined Patent Application Publication No. Hei 04-355722, and Japanese Patent No. 4354491, for example) have been proposed.
  • the sub-pixels of four colors include sub-pixels of three colors, red (R), green (G), blue (B), and a sub-pixel of a color higher in luminance than the three colors (Z; white (W) or yellow (Y), for example).
  • a light incident on a liquid crystal layer from a back light is modulated according to the signal level of a video signal, and a light amount (luminance) of transmitted light (display light) is controlled.
  • spectroscopic characteristic of the transmitted light from the liquid crystal layer generally shows gradation dependency, and transmittance peak shifts to the short wavelength side (blue light side) as the signal level of the video signal lowers.
  • color filters for selectively transmitting light of predetermined wavelength region is disposed in each sub-pixel. Therefore, even if a chromaticity point at the maximum signal level in each of video signals for each color is set as a reference, the above mentioned wavelength shift of transmittance peak is not a major problem.
  • a sub-pixel of Z shows high luminance characteristic, so that spectroscopic characteristic of transmitted light from the sub-pixel of Z largely changes according to a signal level of a video signal. Therefore, a chromaticity point of transmitted light (display light) from whole pixels also largely shifts in response to the signal level of the video signal.
  • a sub-pixel of W is employed as the sub-pixel of Z, since no color filter is disposed in the sub-pixel of W, variation of the chromaticity point of the display light according to the signal level is large.
  • a transmittance in a sub-pixel of W shows relatively high liquid crystal spectroscopic characteristic, in other words, that a transmittance peak is in the vicinity of a wavelength region of G
  • the result is as follows. That is, at a signal level lower than the maximum signal level in the sub-pixel of W, a transmittance peak is located in the wavelength region of B.
  • the liquid crystal display apparatus having the sub-pixel structure of four colors of R, G, B, and Z shows a nonlinearity as follows. Specifically, the nonlinearity is shown in a relationship between a signal level of a Z-sub-pixel video signal (Z signal), and, in the case where the signal level of the Z-sub-pixel video signal is replaced by a set of R-, G-, and B-sub-pixel intermediate video signals.
  • Z signal Z-sub-pixel video signal
  • a signal level of a video signal also nonlinearly changes to cause a variation (color shift) of a chromaticity point, thereby lowering image quality.
  • a complicate arithmetic processing for the nonlinearity becomes necessary upon signal processing, which leads to a complicate device configuration.
  • the present disclosure has been made in view of the above circumstances and provides a liquid crystal display apparatus which can realize, in a simple configuration, a dimming processing while suppressing a lowering of image quality due to color shift in the case of performing a video display using a sub-pixel structure of four colors of R, G, B, and Z.
  • a liquid crystal display apparatus includes: a light source section; a liquid crystal display panel including a plurality of pixels each of which having sub-pixels of three colors of red (R), green (G), and blue (B), and a sub-pixel of a color (Z) showing luminance higher than those of the three colors, the liquid crystal display panel being configured to modulate light emitted from the light source section, based on input video signals corresponding to the respective three colors of R, G, and B to perform a video display; and a display control section including an output signal generation section adapted to generate, based on the input video signals, output video signals corresponding to the respective four colors of R, G, B, and Z, and to generate a lighting signal of the light source section, the display control section being configured to perform a display drive on the sub-pixels of R, G, B, and Z in the liquid crystal display panel with use of the respective output video signals, and perform a lighting drive on the light source section with use of the lighting signal.
  • a display control section including an output signal generation section
  • the output signal generation section generates the lighting signal, based on the input video signals, to carry out a predetermined dimming processing, based on both the input video signals and the generated lighting signal, and the output signal generation section generates the output video signals through carrying out, based on a resultant video signal from the dimming processing, a predetermined color conversion processing.
  • output video signals corresponding to respective four colors of R, G, B, and Z and a lighting signal of the light source section are generated based on input video signals corresponding to respective three colors of R, G, and B, a display drive of each of the sub-pixels of R, G, B, and Z is carried out with use of the output video signals, and a lighting drive on the light source section is carried out with use of the lighting signal.
  • the lighting signal is generated based on the input video signals, and a predetermined dimming processing is carried out based on both the input video signals and the lighting signal, and thereafter, a predetermined color conversion processing based on a resultant video signal from the dimming processing is carried out, to thereby generate the output video signals.
  • the generation and the dimming processing of the lighting signal are carried out to the input video signals which correspond to the three colors of R, G, and B, and thereafter, a color conversion processing is carried out to generate the output video signals which correspond to four colors of R, G, B, and Z.
  • the color shift of the display light due to variation of peak wavelength region in irradiating light from the sub-pixel of Z is suppressed with a simple arithmetic processing (dimming processing).
  • the lighting signal is generated based on the input video signals corresponding to respective three colors of R, G, and B, and a predetermined dimming processing is carried out based on the input video signals and the lighting signal, and thereafter, a predetermined color conversion processing is carried out based on a resultant video signal from the dimming processing, to thereby generate the output video signals corresponding to respective four colors of R, G, B, and Z, so that it is possible to reduce the color shift of the display light due to the nonlinearity with a simple arithmetic processing (dimming processing). Therefore, when a video display is carried out using a sub-pixel structure of four colors of R, G, B, and Z, it is possible to realize a dimming processing while lowering of image quality due to color shift is suppressed with a simple configuration.
  • FIG. 1 is a block diagram illustrating a general configuration of a liquid crystal display apparatus according to an embodiment of the present disclosure.
  • FIGS. 2A and 2B are schematic plan views illustrating exemplary sub-pixel structures of the pixel shown in FIG. 1 .
  • FIG. 3 is a circuit diagram illustrating a specific configuration example of the sub-pixels shown in FIGS. 2A and 2B .
  • FIG. 4 is a block diagram illustrating a specific configuration of an output signal generation section shown in FIG. 1 .
  • FIG. 5 is a block diagram illustrating a specific configuration of an RGB/RGBW conversion section shown in FIG. 4 .
  • FIGS. 6A and 6B are characteristic charts for describing an example of a limiting processing of a signal level when the RGB/RGBW conversion is carried out.
  • FIG. 7 is a characteristic chart illustrating an example of wavelength dependency of spectral transmittance according to a signal level of W signal according to a comparative example.
  • FIG. 8 is a characteristic chart illustrating an example of wavelength dependency of spectral transmittance in each sub-pixel of R, G, B, and W according to the comparative example.
  • FIG. 9 is a characteristic chart illustrating an example of ideal color reproduction characteristic in an RGBW sub-pixel structure in HSV color space.
  • FIG. 10 is a characteristic chart illustrating an example of color reproduction characteristic in the RGBW sub-pixel structure according to the comparative example in HSV color space.
  • FIG. 11 is a characteristic chart illustrating an example of a relationship between a signal level of the W signal and signal levels of R, G, and B in the case where the signal level of W is replaced by a set of R-, G-, and B-sub-pixel intermediate video signal in the RGBW sub-pixel structure according to the comparative example.
  • FIGS. 12A and 12B are characteristic charts illustrating an example of a common LUT which is used in a BL level calculation section according to a modification 1.
  • FIG. 13 is a block diagram illustrating a specific configuration example of a BL level calculation section according to a modification 2.
  • FIG. 14 is a characteristic chart illustrating an example of a LUT for R which is used in the BL level calculation section shown in FIG. 13 .
  • FIG. 15 is a characteristic chart illustrating an example of a LUT for G which is used in the BL level calculation section shown in FIG. 13 .
  • FIG. 16 is a characteristic chart illustrating an example of a LUT for B which is used in the BL level calculation section shown in FIG. 13 .
  • FIGS. 17A and 17B are characteristic charts illustrating another example of a LUT for R which is used in the BL level calculation section shown in FIG. 13 .
  • FIGS. 18A and 18B are characteristic charts illustrating another example of a LUT for G which is used in the BL level calculation section shown in FIG. 13 .
  • FIGS. 19A and 19B are characteristic chart illustrating another example of a LUT for B which is used in the BL level calculation section shown in FIG. 13 .
  • FIGS. 20A and 20B are schematic plan views illustrating exemplary sub-pixel structures of a pixel according to a modification 3.
  • Embodiment (example of liquid crystal display apparatus using RGBW panel)
  • Modification 1 (example in which common LUT is used between R, G, and B in BL level calculation section)
  • Modification 2 (example in which individual LUTs are used for each of R, G, and B in BL level calculation section)
  • FIG. 1 is a block diagram illustrating a general configuration of a liquid crystal display apparatus 1 according to an embodiment of the present disclosure.
  • the liquid crystal display apparatus 1 carries out a video display based on an input video signal Din which is externally input.
  • the liquid crystal display apparatus 1 includes a liquid crystal display panel 2 , a back light 3 (light source section), a video signal processing section 41 , an output signal generation section 42 , a timing control section 43 , a back light driving section 50 , a data driver 51 , and a gate driver 52 .
  • the video signal processing section 41 , the output signal generation section 42 , the timing control section 43 , the back light driving section 50 , the data driver 51 , and the gate driver 52 correspond to a specific example of “a display control section” of the present disclosure.
  • the liquid crystal display panel 2 modulates light emitted from the back light 3 (described later) based on an input video signal Din to carry out a video display based on the input video signal Din.
  • the liquid crystal display panel 2 includes a plurality of pixels 20 arranged in a matrix as a whole.
  • FIGS. 2A and 2B are schematic plan views each illustrating an exemplary sub-pixel structure in each pixel 20 .
  • Each pixel 20 has, a sub-pixel 20 R corresponding to red (R), a sub-pixel 20 G corresponding to green (G), a sub-pixel 20 B corresponding to blue (B), and a sub-pixel 20 W corresponding to white (W) which is higher in luminance than these three colors.
  • the sub-pixels 20 R, 20 G, 20 B, and 20 W of four colors of R, G, B, and W
  • the sub-pixels 20 R, 20 G, and 20 B respectively corresponding to three colors of R, G, and B have color filters 24 R, 24 G, and 24 B respectively corresponding to colors of R, G, and B.
  • the color filter 24 R corresponding to R is disposed to the sub-pixel 20 R corresponding to R
  • the color filter 24 G corresponding to G is disposed to the sub-pixel 20 G corresponding to G
  • the color filter 24 B corresponding to B is disposed to the sub-pixel 20 B corresponding to B.
  • no color filter is disposed to the sub-pixel 20 W corresponding to W.
  • luminance efficiency of video display can be enhanced compared with the case of the sub-pixel structure of three colors of R, G, and B. Details will be described later.
  • FIG. 3 illustrates an exemplary circuit configuration of a pixel circuit in each of the sub-pixels 20 R, 20 G, 20 B, and 20 W.
  • Each of the sub-pixels 20 R, 20 G, 20 B, and 20 W has a liquid crystal device 22 , a TFT device 21 , and a subsidiary capacitive device 23 .
  • a gate line G for line-sequentially selecting a pixel to be driven
  • a data line D for supplying to a pixel to be driven a video voltage (a video voltage supplied from the data driver 51 described later), and a subsidiary capacitive line Cs are connected.
  • the liquid crystal device 22 carries out a display operation according to a video voltage supplied to one end thereof from the data line D through the TFT device 21 .
  • the liquid crystal device 22 is a device in which a liquid crystal layer (not shown) made up of a liquid crystal such as VA (Vertical Alignment) mode liquid crystal or TN (Twisted Nematic) mode liquid crystal is sandwiched between a pair of electrodes (not shown).
  • a liquid crystal layer made up of a liquid crystal such as VA (Vertical Alignment) mode liquid crystal or TN (Twisted Nematic) mode liquid crystal is sandwiched between a pair of electrodes (not shown).
  • One of, or one end of, the pair of electrodes in the liquid crystal device 22 is connected to a drain of the TFT device 21 and one end of the subsidiary capacitive device 23 , the other of, or the other end of, the pair of electrodes is grounded.
  • the subsidiary capacitive device 23 is a capacitive device for stabilizing an accumulated charge of the liquid crystal device 22 .
  • One end of the subsidiary capacitive device 23 is connected to one end of the liquid crystal device 22 and the drain of the TFT device 21 , and the other end is connected to the subsidiary capacitive line Cs.
  • the TFT device 21 is a switching device for supplying, to both of one end of the liquid crystal device 22 and one end of the subsidiary capacitive device 23 , a video voltage based on a video signal D 1 , and is a MOS-FET (Metal Oxide Semiconductor-Field Effect Transistor).
  • a gate and a source of the TFT device 21 are connected to the gate line G and the data line D, respectively, and the drain of the TFT device 21 is connected to both of one end of the liquid crystal device 22 and one end of the subsidiary capacitive device 23 .
  • the back light 3 is a light source section for irradiating light to the liquid crystal display panel 2 , and is made up of, for example, Cold Cathode Fluorescent Lamp (CCFL), Light Emitting Diode (LED), or the like as a light emitting device.
  • the back light 3 carries out a lighting drive (active control or dynamic control of luminance) according to a luminance level or signal level of an input video signal Din, and the detail will be described later.
  • the video signal processing section 41 carries out, for example, a predetermined image processing (e.g., sharpness processing, gamma correction, or the like) for improving image quality on an input video signal Din of the pixel signal corresponding to three primary colors of R, G, and B.
  • a video signal D 1 of the pixel signal corresponding to three colors of R, G, and B that is, a pixel signal D 1 r for R, a pixel signal D 1 g for G, and a pixel signal D 1 b for B
  • a video signal D 1 of the pixel signal corresponding to three colors of R, G, and B is generated.
  • the output signal generation section 42 carries out a predetermined signal processing described later based on a video signal D 1 (D 1 r , D 1 g , and D 1 b ) supplied from the video signal processing section 41 .
  • a lighting signal BL 1 which shows luminance level (lighting level) in the back light 3
  • a video signal D 4 pixel signal D 4 r for R, pixel signal D 4 g for G, pixel signal D 4 b for B, and pixel signal D 4 w for W
  • an output video signal are generated.
  • the lighting signal BL 1 is generated based on the video signal D 1 , and a predetermined dimming processing described later is carried out based on the video signal D 1 and the generated lighting signal BL 1 . Then, a predetermined color conversion processing described later is carried out based on the resultant video signal from the dimming processing (video signal D 2 described later), thereby generating a video signal D 4 . It is to be noted that, specific configuration of the output signal generation section 42 will be described later ( FIG. 4 to FIG. 6B ).
  • the timing control section 43 controls the drive timing of the back light driving section 50 , the gate driver 52 , and the data driver 51 , and supplies a video signal D 4 supplied from the output signal generation section 42 to the data driver 51 .
  • the gate driver 52 line-sequentially drives each of the pixels 20 (each of sub-pixels 20 R, 20 G, 20 B, and 20 W) in the liquid crystal display panel 2 along the gate line G.
  • the data driver 51 supplies the video voltage based on the video signal D 4 supplied from the timing control section 43 to each of the pixels 20 (each of the sub-pixels 20 R, 20 G, 20 B, and 20 W) of the liquid crystal display panel 2 .
  • the data driver 51 supplies the pixel signal D 4 r for R to the sub-pixel 20 R, supplies the pixel signal D 4 g for G to the sub-pixel 20 G, supplies the pixel signal D 4 b for B to the sub-pixel 20 B, and supplies the pixel signal D 4 w for W to the sub-pixel 20 W. More specifically, the data driver 51 converts the video signal D 4 from digital to analog (D/A) to generate a video signal (above mentioned video voltage) as an analog signal, and outputs the resulting signal to each of the pixels 20 (each of the sub-pixels 20 R, 20 G, 20 B, and 20 W). In this manner, the display drive of each of the pixels 20 (each of the sub-pixels 20 R, 20 G, 20 B, and 20 W) in the liquid crystal display panel 2 based on the video signal D 4 is carried out.
  • D/A digital to analog
  • a video signal above mentioned video voltage
  • the back light driving section 50 carries out a lighting drive (lighting drive) of the back light 3 based on the lighting signal BL 1 output from the output signal generation section 42 .
  • a lighting drive active control or dynamic control of luminance
  • the detail will be described later.
  • FIG. 4 illustrates a block configuration of the output signal generation section 42 .
  • the output signal generation section 42 has a BL level calculation section 421 , an LCD level calculation section 422 , a chromaticity point adjustment section 423 , and an RGB/RGBW conversion section 424 .
  • the BL level calculation section 421 generates a lighting signal BL 1 in the back light 3 based on a video signal D 1 (D 1 r , D 1 g , and D 1 b ). Specifically, the BL level calculation section 421 analyses a luminance level (signal level) of the video signal D 1 to obtain a lighting signal BL 1 corresponding to the luminance level. Specifics of the generating operation for the lighting signal BL 1 in the BL level calculation section 421 will be described later.
  • the LCD level calculation section 422 Based on the video signal D 1 (D 1 r , D 1 g , and D 1 b ) and the lighting signal BL 1 output from the BL level calculation section 421 , the LCD level calculation section 422 generates a video signal D 2 (pixel signal D 2 r for R, pixel signal D 2 g for G, and pixel signal D 2 b for B). Specifically, the LCD level calculation section 422 carries out a predetermined dimming processing (here, the signal level of the video signal D 1 is divided by the signal level of the lighting signal BL 1 ) based on the video signal D 1 and the lighting signal BL 1 to generate the video signal D 2 .
  • a predetermined dimming processing here, the signal level of the video signal D 1 is divided by the signal level of the lighting signal BL 1
  • the LCD level calculation section 422 generates the video signal D 2 with use of the following expressions (1) to (3).
  • D 2 r ( D 1 r/BL 1) (1)
  • D 2 g ( D 1 g/BL 1) (2)
  • D 2 b ( D 1 b/BL 1) (3)
  • the chromaticity point adjustment section 423 carries out a predetermined chromaticity point adjustment of a video signal D 2 (D 2 r , D 2 g , and D 2 b ) to generate a video signal D 3 (D 3 r , D 3 g , and D 3 b ).
  • a video signal D 2 (D 1 ) is a video signal indicating white (W)
  • the chromaticity point adjustment is carried out so that a chromaticity point of display light emitted from the liquid crystal display panel 2 based on emitted light from the back light 3 is white chromaticity point.
  • a video signal D 2 (D 1 ) is a video signal indicating white (W)” corresponds to the case when a luminance level (signal level or luminance gradation) of each of the pixel signals D 2 r , D 2 g , and D 2 b (D 1 r , D 1 g , and D 1 b ) is at the maximum value.
  • the chromaticity point adjustment section 423 carries out a chromaticity point adjustment with use of, for example, a transformation matrix M d2 ⁇ d3 specified by the following expression (4).
  • the video signal D 2 (pixel signals D 2 r , D 2 g , and D 2 b ) is multiplied by the transformation matrix M d2 ⁇ d3 , in other words, a matrix operation is carried out, thereby generating the video signal D 3 (pixel signals D 3 r , D 3 g , and D 3 b ).
  • the transformation matrix M d2 ⁇ d3 can be obtained by multiplying the transformation matrix M d2 ⁇ XYZ by the transformation matrix M XYZ ⁇ d3 (matrix operation).
  • the transformation matrix M d2 ⁇ XYZ is a transformation matrix from the video signal D 2 to the tristimulus values (X, Y, Z) in the white color chromaticity point.
  • the transformation matrix M XYZ ⁇ d3 is a transformation matrix from this tristimulus values (X, Y, Z) to the video signal D 3 , and can be obtained with use of the following expression (5).
  • (Xw, Yw, Zw) represent tristimulus values in the sub-pixel 20 W
  • (Wr, Wg, Wb) represent the signal level of each sub-pixel intermediate video signal in the case where the signal level of the video signal (W signal) for the sub-pixel 20 W is replaced by a set of the intermediate video signals for each of the sub-pixels 20 R, 20 G, and 20 B.
  • the RGB/RGBW conversion section 424 carries out a predetermined RGB/RGBW conversion processing (color conversion processing) on the video signal D 3 (D 3 r , D 3 g , and D 3 b ) which corresponds to the three colors of R, G, and B and is output from the chromaticity point adjustment section 423 .
  • a video signal D 4 (D 4 r , D 4 g , D 4 b , and D 4 w ) corresponding to four colors of R, G, B, and W is generated.
  • FIG. 5 illustrates a block configuration of the RGB/RGBW conversion section 424 .
  • the RGB/RGBW conversion section 424 has LUTs (Look-Up Tables) 61 R, 61 G, and 61 B for each color of R, G, and B; a Min selection section 62 ; LUTs 63 R, 63 G, and 63 B for each color of R, G, and B; a Max selection section 64 ; a Min selection section 65 ; LUTs 66 R, 66 G, and 66 B for each color of R, G, and B; and subtraction sections 67 R, 67 G, and 67 B.
  • LUTs Look-Up Tables
  • the pixel signals D 3 r , D 3 g , and D 3 b which are input signals, are described as Sr, Sg, and Sb, respectively.
  • the LUTs 61 R, 61 G, and 61 B are LUTs which respectively correspond to inverse functions invfr, invfg, and invfb described later. Therefore, in the figure, the LUTs 61 R, 61 G, and 61 B are respectively shown as “Invfr-LUT”, “Invfg-LUT”, and “Invfb-LUT”.
  • the LUTs 63 R, 63 G, and 63 B are LUTs which respectively correspond to inverse functions invFr, invFg, and invFb described later. Therefore, in the figure, the LUTs 63 R, 63 G, and 63 B are respectively shown as “InvFr-LUT”, “InvFg-LUT”, and “InvFb-LUT”. Further, LUTs 66 R, 66 G, and 66 B are LUTs which respectively correspond to functions fr, fg, and fb described later. Therefore, in the figure, the LUTs 66 R, 66 G, and 66 B are respectively shown as fr-LUT, fg-LUT, and fb-LUT.
  • LUTs representing which set of signal levels can realize the process, when a signal level of a video signal D 4 w (Sw) for a sub-pixel 20 W is replaced by a set of the intermediate video signals for sub-pixels 20 R, 20 G, and 20 B (which correspond to above-mentioned Wr, Wg, and Wb, respectively), is used.
  • LUTs 66 R, 66 G, and 66 B (first LUT) which are LUTs prepared according to nonlinearity (nonlinearity in a relationship between a signal level of Sw and signal levels of Wr, Wg, and Wb) to be described later and shown in FIG. 11 , are used.
  • LUTs 61 R, 61 G, and 61 B respectively corresponding to the inverse function invfr (Sr), invfg (Sg), and invfb (Sb) are provided.
  • signal levels of inputs (Sr, Sg, and Sb) exceed the maximum value of each color in the vertical axis in the graph shown in FIG.
  • the signal level of each of pixel signals D 4 r , D 4 g , D 4 b , and D 4 w after the RGB/RGBW conversion will also be near 1.0, which is the upper limit. Therefore, if the signal level of the pixel signal D 4 w (W signal Sw) is changed, the signal level will exceed upper limit, which means the W signal Sw will be uniquely determined and there is no degree of freedom in signal level.
  • pixels 20 other than the pixel showing the highest luminance level in all of the pixels 20 of the liquid crystal display panel 2 , have a degree of freedom in the signal level of W signal Sw, in a range of the condition (restriction) specified by the expression (10) and the restriction that the signal level of each pixel signals D 4 r , D 4 g , D 4 b , and D 4 w is 1.0, which is the upper limit of them, or lower. Therefore, in such pixels 20 , in order to uniquely determine the signal level of the W signal Sw, another constraint condition may be required in addition to the expression (10).
  • the signal level (signal amplitude) of each of pixel signals D 4 r , D 4 g , D 4 b , and D 4 w should be at the smallest level.
  • display light is emitted in such a manner that there is no unevenness in luminance (in such a manner as to make luminance even) as far as possible, thereby advantageously making it possible to reduce graininess (graininess caused by sub-pixel structure) of the image when displayed in one color.
  • an RGB/RGBW conversion processing be carried out in the RGB/RGBW conversion section 424 so that signal levels of pixel signals D 4 r , D 4 g , D 4 b , and D 4 w making up the video signal D 4 are substantially equal to each other.
  • the signal level of the W signal is evaluated.
  • the solution in this case will be equal to the highest signal level in the pixel signals D 4 r , D 4 g , and D 4 b , so that the solution will be the one having the highest level in the above described solutions.
  • This can be expressed by the following expressions (11) to (14).
  • functions Fr (Sw), Fg (Sw), and Fb (Sw) set by the following expressions (14) to (16) are provided.
  • the signal level Sw_ 2 of W signal which is evaluated by the following expression (17) using inverse functions invFr (Sw), invFg (Sw), and invFb (Sw) respectively corresponding to the functions Fr (Sw), Fg (Sw), and Fb (Sw), is the signal level of W signal which satisfies the other constraint condition.
  • the highest value in the values of inverse functions invFr (Sw), invFg (Sw), and invFb (Sw) is the Sw_ 2 .
  • a condition (Sw_ 2 ⁇ Sw_ 1 ) that the signal level after the RGB/RGBW conversion has positive value may be required to be satisfied.
  • Sw_ 2 which makes one of the pixel signals D 4 r , D 4 g , and D 4 b into “0” will be selected. Therefore, the W signal Sw finally evaluated upon an RGB/RGBW conversion processing is expressed by the following expression (18). In other words, of Sw_ 1 and Sw_ 2 , the signal level having the lower value (the lowest value) is W signal Sw.
  • a LUT 61 R is a LUT which corresponds to the above described inverse function invfr (Sr), and outputs a value (signal level) indicated by the inverse function invfr (Sr) in response to input of a pixel signal D 3 r (Sr).
  • a LUT 61 G is a LUT which corresponds to the above described inverse function invfg (Sg), and outputs a value (signal level) indicated by the inverse function invfg (Sg) in response to input of a pixel signal D 3 g (Sg).
  • a LUT 61 B is a LUT which corresponds to the above described inverse function invfb (Sb), and outputs a value (signal level) indicated by the inverse function invfb (Sb) in response to input of a pixel signal D 3 b (Sb).
  • a Min selection section 62 is a section in which an arithmetic processing corresponding to the above described expression (10) is carried out, and from values (signal levels) output from LUTs 61 R, 61 G, and 61 B, the signal level having the lowest value is selected and output as Sw_ 1 .
  • a LUT 63 R is a LUT which corresponds to the above described inverse function invFr (Sr), and outputs a value (signal level) indicated by the inverse function invFr (Sr) in response to input of a pixel signal D 3 r (Sr).
  • a LUT 63 G is a LUT which corresponds to the above described inverse function invFg (Sg), and outputs a value (signal level) indicated by the inverse function invFg (Sg) in response to input of a pixel signal D 3 g (Sg).
  • a LUT 63 B is a LUT which corresponds to the above described inverse function invFb (Sb), and outputs a value (signal level) indicated by the inverse function invFb (Sb) in response to input of a pixel signal D 3 b (Sb).
  • a Max selection section 64 is a section in which an arithmetic processing corresponding to the above described expression (17) is carried out, and from values (signal levels) output from LUTs 63 R, 63 G, and 63 B, the signal level having the highest value is selected and output as Sw_ 2 .
  • a Min selection section 65 is a portion in which an arithmetic processing corresponding the above described expression (18) is carried out, and from Sw_ 1 and Sw_ 2 , the signal level having the lowest value (lower value) is selected and output as Sw.
  • a LUT 66 R is a LUT which corresponds to the above described function fr (Sw), and outputs a value (signal level) indicated by the function fr (Sw) in response to input of a W signal Sw.
  • a LUT 66 G is a LUT which corresponds to the above described function fg (Sw), and outputs a value (signal level) indicated by the function fg (Sw) in response to input of a W signal Sw.
  • a LUT 66 B is a LUT which corresponds to the above described function fb (Sw), and outputs a value (signal level) indicated by the function fb (Sw) in response to input of a W signal Sw.
  • a processing for limiting a signal level during the RGB/RGBW conversion processing in the RGB/RGBW conversion section 424 so that a signal level of pixel signals D 4 r , D 4 g , D 4 b , and D 4 w does not exceed a predetermined upper limit (e.g., 1.0).
  • a predetermined upper limit e.g., 1.0
  • the total number of sub-pixels is four thirds times larger than that in a liquid crystal display panel having a sub-pixel structure of three colors of R, G, and B, and therefore aperture ratio of each sub-pixel of the sub-pixel structure of four colors is relatively small.
  • display luminance of each sub-pixel in the sub-pixel structure of four colors tends to be relatively lower than luminance of each sub-pixel in the sub-pixel structure of three colors.
  • the signal level (luminance level) thereof may be made higher.
  • the video signal may exceed a predetermined upper limit (e.g., 1.0). If a configuration where signals which exceed the upper limit are all (evenly) set to the upper limit is adopted, then a gradation thereof will be lost (gradation thereof will be roughened), causing a discontinuity in luminance gradation.
  • gain coefficient (shown in FIG. 6A ) determined corresponding to the highest level in signal levels of video signals (pixel signals D 4 r , D 4 g , D 4 b , and D 4 w ) is multiplied by each of the signals, thereby carrying out a correction (limiting processing) of signal levels. More specifically, when the signal level is above the threshold level, as shown by the arrow in the figure, the value of gain coefficient is gradually (here, linearly) decreased. Thus, as shown in FIG.
  • the signal level of the video signal after the correction is made higher than before the correction
  • the signal level can be prevented from exceeding a predetermined upper limit (here, 1.0).
  • a predetermined upper limit here, 1.0
  • the increase rate of the signal level of the video signal after correction is gradually decreased, as shown by the arrow in the figure, and the upper limit can be reached exactly when the signal level before correction reaches the maximum value (here, 1.5).
  • the pixel signal D 4 w (W signal Sw) can be prevented from exceeding the upper limit of 1.0, so that it is also possible to carry out the above described signal level limiting processing only on the pixel signals D 4 r , D 4 g , and D 4 b.
  • a relationship between a signal level of Sw (described later) and signal levels of Wr, Wg and Wb supposedly shows linearity (proportional relationship), not nonlinearity as shown in FIG. 11 , for example, a video signal after RGB/RGBW conversion also shows nonlinearity. In that case, if the signal level is multiplied by constant after the signal level is converted to video signals corresponding to four colors of R, G, B, and W, chromaticity point will not be changed.
  • the signal level of the lighting signal BL 1 can be obtained.
  • the relationship between the signal level of Sw and the signal levels of Wr, Wg, and Wb shows, for example, nonlinearity as shown in FIG. 11 . Therefore, in the present embodiment, the above described method is not usable in the case where the signal level of the lighting signal BL 1 is to be computed.
  • a method may be adopted in which a solution of expression is obtained so that the maximum value of a video signal D 4 obtained through an RGB/RGBW conversion after the a video signal D 3 output from the chromaticity point adjustment section 423 is multiplied by constant (k fold) is 1.0.
  • this method is described in four cases. It is to be noted that, in the description below, three colors composing the video signal are denoted as c 1 , c 2 , and c 3 , each of which corresponds to any of R, G, and B.
  • a solution can be obtained from a condition that all the pixel signals D 4 r , D 4 g , D 4 b , and D 4 w after an RGB/RGBW conversion have positive value.
  • the pixel signal corresponding to one of the rest of the three colors c 1 to c 3 is a value within the range from 0 to 1, so that the following expressions (19) to (21) can be obtained.
  • the expressions (19) to (21) with use of the expressions (19) and (20), the following expression (22) can be obtained.
  • function G c1,c2 (Sw) specified by the following expression (23) is defined.
  • inverse function G ⁇ 1 c1,c2 (Sc 1 /Sc 2 ) corresponding to function G c1,c2 (Sw) specified by the following expression (24) is obtained to prepare a Look-Up Table.
  • a W signal Sw and a multiplying factor k are obtained with use of the following expression (25). If the W signal Sw and the multiplying factor k thus obtained satisfy the above described expression (21), then the multiplying factor k is the maximum multiplying factor in question.
  • a value of a W signal Sw indicating a peak value is expressed as Sw_p.
  • a value V of a video signal D 3 before a RGB/RGBW conversion is higher than that in the case where a W signal Sw is 1.
  • each of pixel signals D 4 r and D 4 g other than the pixel signal D 4 b only needs to be a value within the range from 0 to 1, so that expressions (30) to (32) can be obtained. If there exists a multiplying factor k which satisfies these expressions (30) to (32), the multiplying factor k is the maximum multiplying factor in question, and can be expressed by the following expression (33).
  • the factor k having the highest value is the multiplying factor k in question.
  • the right-hand value in the expression (36) monotonically decreases in the range larger than the value Sw_p of the W signal Sw at peak value.
  • the multiplying factor k should be lower than the right-hand value in the expression (36) with respect to all the colors of c 1 to c 3 ; therefore, in the range where the right-hand value in the expression (36) has larger value, a point where the multiplying factor k gives the maximum value is as follows.
  • the multiplying factor k can be evaluated, and the value V which is evaluated by multiplying the multiplying factor k by a video signal D 3 before a RGB/RGBW conversion is the maximum value in that case.
  • the video signal processing section 41 carries out a predetermined image processing on the input video signal Din, thereby generating a video signal D 1 (D 1 r , D 1 g , and D 1 b ).
  • the output signal generation section 42 carries out a predetermined signal processing on the video signal D 1 .
  • a lighting signal BL 1 in the back light 3 and a video signal D 4 (D 4 r , D 4 g , D 4 b , and D 4 z ) in the liquid crystal display panel 2 are generated.
  • the video signal D 4 and the lighting signal BL 1 thus generated are input to the timing control section 43 .
  • the video signal D 4 is supplied from the timing control section 43 to the data driver 51 .
  • the data driver 51 converts the video signal D 4 from digital to analog so as to generate a video voltage serving as analog signal.
  • the display drive operation is carried out.
  • the display drive based on the video signal D 4 (D 4 r , D 4 g , D 4 b , and D 4 w ) is carried out to the pixel 20 (each of the sub-pixels 20 R, 20 G, 20 B, and 20 W) in the liquid crystal display panel 2 .
  • the lighting signal BL 1 is supplied from the timing control section 43 to the back light driving section 50 .
  • the back light driving section 50 carries out, based on the lighting signal BL 1 , a lighting drive (lighting drive) for each light source (each light emitting device) in the back light 3 .
  • a lighting drive active control of luminance (dynamic control)
  • a luminance level signal level of an input video signal Din.
  • the video display is carried out with use of video signals corresponding to the sub-pixels 20 R, 20 G, 20 B, and 20 W of four colors. Therefore, in comparison with the known apparatus in which a video display is carried out with use of video signals corresponding to sub-pixels of three colors of R, G, and B, enhanced luminance efficiency can be achieved. In addition, since an active drive of the back light 3 is carried out with use of luminance according to the luminance level of the input video signal Din, lower power consumption and expansion of dynamic range can be realized while keeping a display luminance.
  • an operation for generating an output signal (operation in the output signal generation section 42 ) in the case of using a sub-pixel structure of four colors of R, G, B, and W is specifically described in comparison with comparative example.
  • incident light on a liquid crystal layer from a back light is modulated according to a signal level of a video signal, and amount of light (luminance) of transmitted light (display light) is controlled.
  • Spectroscopic characteristic of transmitted light from the liquid crystal layer indicates gradation dependency, and as the signal level of the video signal lowers, a transmittance peak shifts to the short wavelength side (blue color light side) (see FIG. 7 , for example).
  • a sub-pixel of Z (W) shows a high luminance characteristic, so that spectroscopic characteristic of the transmitted light from the sub-pixel of Z (W) changes according to a signal level of a video signal.
  • FIG. 8 illustrates spectroscopic transmittance in each of sub-pixels R, G, B, and W.
  • color reproduction characteristic in a sub-pixel structure of four colors of R, G, B, and W is illustrated in HSV color space, if it is assumed that there is no variation in transmittance peak in sub-pixel of W, the result is ideally as shown in FIG. 9 , for example.
  • shown in FIG. 9 is a rotationally symmetric color space with the white-color chromaticity point as the center.
  • color reproduction characteristic in the sub-pixel structure of four colors of R, G, B, and W according to comparative example (known) will be as shown in FIG. 10 , for example.
  • a bright (value of value V is high) region exists in colors (color phase) from white (W) to blue (B) side, while dark (value of value V is low) region exists in color region (color phase) from magenta (M) to cyan (C) with yellow (Y) at the center thereof.
  • M magenta
  • C cyan
  • Y yellow
  • FIG. 11 illustrates an exemplary relationship between a signal level of a W-sub-pixel video signal (signal level of W signal) and, above described Wr, Wg, and Wb (signal level of each of R-, G-, and B-sub-pixel intermediate video signals in the case where a signal level of W signal is replaced by a set of the R-, G-, and B-sub pixel intermediate video signals) in the sub-pixel structure of four colors of R, G, B, and W according to the comparative example. If it is assumed that there is no variation in transmittance peak in the sub-pixel of W as in the case shown in FIG. 9 , for example, the relationship between the signal level of W signal and Wr, Wg, and Wb will be proportional (will show linearity).
  • each of Wr, Wg, and Wb is a function having a gradient depending on a signal level of W signal (shows nonlinearity).
  • a signal level of the video signal is also nonlinearly changed to cause a variation (color shift) in chromaticity point in some cases, thereby lowering image quality. Further, in order to reduce such a lowering of image quality due to the color shift, a complicated arithmetic processing for the nonlinearity becomes necessary during a signal processing (dimming processing), which results in a complicated device configuration.
  • signal processing are carried out in the output signal generation section 42 as follows. Specifically, firstly, the BL level calculation section 421 generates a lighting signal BL 1 based on a video signal D 1 , and then, the LCD level calculation section 422 carries out a predetermined dimming processing (division operation) based on the video signal D 1 and the lighting signal BL 1 to generate a video signal D 2 .
  • the RGB/RGBW conversion section 424 carries out a RGB/RGBW conversion processing on a video signal D 3 based on the resultant video signal D 2 from the dimming processing to generate a video signal D 4 .
  • the generation and dimming processing of the lighting signal BL 1 are carried out on the video signal D 1 (D 1 r , D 1 g , and D 1 b ) corresponding to the three colors of R, G, and B, and thereafter, the RGB/RGBW conversion processing is carried out to generate the video signal D 4 corresponding to four colors of R, G, B, and W.
  • the result is as follows. That is, the color shift of the display light due to variation of peak wavelength region (above-described nonlinearity) in emitted light (transmitted light) from the sub-pixel 20 W is suppressed with a simple arithmetic processing (dimming processing).
  • the chromaticity point adjustment section 423 in the output signal generation section 42 carries out a predetermined chromaticity point adjustment on the video signal D 2 (D 2 r , D 2 g , and D 2 b ) to generate a video signal D 3 (D 3 r , D 3 g , and D 3 b ). More specifically, when the video signal D 2 (D 1 ) is a video signal which indicates W, the chromaticity point adjustment is carried out so that the chromaticity point of display light emitted from the liquid crystal display panel 2 based on the emitted light from the back light 3 is a white-color chromaticity point.
  • the RGB/RGBW conversion section 424 carries out the RGB/RGBW conversion processing for the video signal D 3 (D 3 r , D 3 g , and D 3 b ) after the chromaticity point adjustment in order to generate the video signal D 4 (D 4 r , D 4 g , D 4 b , and D 4 w ) which corresponds to four colors of R, G, B, and W.
  • the chromaticity point adjustment section 423 carries out the chromaticity point adjustment, by using, for example, the transformation matrix M d2 ⁇ d3 specified by the expression (4).
  • the video signal D 2 (pixel signals D 2 r , D 2 g , and D 2 b ) is multiplied by the transformation matrix M d2 ⁇ d3 (or, matrix operation is carried out), thereby to generate the video signal D 3 (pixel signals D 3 r , D 3 g , and D 3 b ).
  • the chromaticity point of the display light indicates a white-color chromaticity point.
  • the chromaticity point of the peak wavelength region in emitted light from the sub-pixel 20 W is adjusted, and the color shift of the display light is suppressed.
  • the LUTs 66 R, 66 G, and 66 B provided in advance according to, for example, the nonlinearity shown in FIG. 11 (nonlinearity in the relationship between a signal level of Sw and signal levels of Wr, Wg, and Wb) are used.
  • a characteristic e.g., the above described nonlinearity
  • the lighting signal BL 1 is generated based on the video signal D 1 corresponding to three colors of R, G, and B and the predetermined dimming processing based on the video signal D 1 and the lighting signal BL 1 is carried out, and thereafter, the predetermined RGB/RGBW conversion processing based on the video signal D 2 after the dimming processing is carried out, thereby to generate the video signal D 4 corresponding to four colors of R, G, B, and W. Consequently, it is possible to reduce the color shift of the display light caused by the nonlinearity with a simple arithmetic processing (dimming processing). Therefore, in the case where a video display is carried out using the sub-pixel structure of four colors of R, G, B, and W, the dimming processing can be realized in a simple configuration with the lowering of image quality due to color shift being suppressed.
  • the pixel 20 of the embodiment is configured to include the sub-pixel 20 W corresponding to W as an example of a sub-pixel 20 Z which will be described later, it is not necessary to provide any color filter in this sub-pixel 20 W, and therefore enhanced efficiency in luminance (lower power consumption) can be realized in particular.
  • the BL level calculation section 421 in the liquid crystal display apparatus 1 of the embodiment uses a common LUT shared by R, G, and B hereinafter described (common LUT 70 described later). Specifically, when generating a lighting signal BL 1 , as opposed to the embodiment, the BL level calculation section 421 uses a LUT (second Look-Up Table) in which a relationship between chromaticity of the video signal D 1 and the highest signal level which can be expressed in the chromaticity or the inverse of the signal level is specified in advance.
  • LUT second Look-Up Table
  • the reason for this is as follows. That is, although the highest signal level (signal amplitude) which can be expressed can be obtained by using the circuit configuration as in the embodiment, the configuration (circuit configuration) may be complicated. In view of this, in the modification 1, the highest signal level which can be expressed for chromaticity of the video signal D 1 is calculated in advance, and the resulting level is retained as a LUT for the video signal D 1 . In this manner, through comparison with the signal level of the video signal D 1 , the lighting signal BL 1 can be calculated. Methods for preliminarily calculating the highest signal level which can be expressed for the chromaticity of the video signal D 1 are described below.
  • the highest signal level which can be expressed may be obtained with use of the methods for obtaining solutions in each of the cases (1) to (4) explained in the above described embodiment.
  • a video signal D 1 before an RGB/RGBW conversion may be obtained through a back calculation of a video signal D 4 after the RGB/RGBW conversion.
  • a pixel signal corresponding to either of colors of R, G, or B is 1 as the upper limit.
  • a reverse conversion (RGBW/RGB conversion) of a video signal in which a pixel signal corresponding to either of colors is made to be 1 and at the same time the other pixel signals corresponding to the other colors are minutely changed is carried out to thereby generate a video signal D 3 , and through inverse matrix calculation, or the like, of the video signal D 3 , the video signal D 1 is obtained.
  • the video signal D 1 obtained in this way is divided by chromaticity, and the signal having amplitude of the largest value V in the chromaticity is obtained as the highest signal.
  • a repeated computation may be adopted and the computation method is as follows. Firstly, an arbitrary video signal D 1 is multiplied by constant until its signal level (amplitude) is, for example, almost 2, and then, a matrix conversion, and an RGB/RGBW conversion which gives the minimum amplitude are carried out. At this point of time, a W signal Sw is converted up to 1 as the upper limit of LUT while pixel signals corresponding to R, G, and B exceed 1.
  • d the signal level (amplitude) of the video signal D 1 is denoted by h.
  • the next input signal is a signal wherein the video signal D 1 is multiplied by (h ⁇ d)/h
  • the matrix operation and the RGB/RGBW conversion are carried out to evaluate the difference value d between the upper limit and 1.
  • This computation is repeatedly carried out until the difference value d becomes below a predetermined threshold level (minute value), and amplitude of value V of the input signal at that time is used as the highest expressible signal level.
  • a LUT of HSV type as the common LUT 70 shown in FIGS. 12A and 12B , can be given as an example.
  • the common LUT 70 is a LUT in which hue H and saturation S in chromaticity of the video signal D 1 are obtained, and the highest expressible signal level for those is used as value V.
  • the lighting signal BL 1 can be obtained with use of the highest value (the highest value in all pixels 20 ) of the ratio which can be obtained by dividing the video signal D 1 by the highest expressible signal level (value V) which is obtained from the common LUT 70 .
  • luminance of the back light causes bouncing (color skipping) and other problems, so that luminance of the back light is changed with a certain amount of time constant.
  • luminance of the back light changes only in a certain amount of time constraint, so that the luminance and chromaticity of the region will not be correctly expressed, thereby generating “dark” portion.
  • the signal level variation in the lighting signal BL 1 in response to chromaticity variation in the video signal D 1 be limited to equal to or lower than a predetermined threshold level.
  • a predetermined threshold level a value of sensitivity of the human eye (for example, ⁇ E ⁇ 1.0) can be given.
  • ⁇ E is color difference between two colors which is defined in CIE1976 L*u*v* color system and CIE1976 L*a*b* color system, and values around ⁇ E ⁇ 1 are the allowable tolerance of color difference.
  • the common LUT 70 is set in this manner, it is possible to reduce the rapid change in luminance, bouncing (color skipping), and the like which are caused by a steep change in luminance of the back light due to a shape of a color space.
  • a liquid crystal display apparatus includes a BL calculation section 421 A described below disposed in place of the BL level calculation section 421 in the liquid crystal display apparatus 1 of the above mentioned embodiment.
  • the BL level calculation section 421 A uses individual LUTs (LUTs 74 R, 74 G, and 74 B described later) for each of pixel signals corresponding to R, G, and B.
  • the BL level calculation section 421 A of the modification 2 includes three kinds of LUTs each of which is used when each of pixel signals of R, G, and B is at the maximum value.
  • the input signal is divided by the maximum value of R, G, and B, and chromaticity is specified by values other than the maximum value.
  • FIG. 13 illustrates an exemplary block configuration of the BL level calculation section 421 A.
  • the BL level calculation section 421 A includes a Max selection section 71 , a division section 72 , a selection output section 73 , and LUTs 74 R, 74 G, and 74 B for each color of R, G, and B.
  • the Max selection section 71 selects a pixel signal which has the highest signal level from pixel signals D 1 r , D 1 g , and D 1 b in a video signal D 1 , and outputs the selected signal.
  • the division section 72 is a section in which each of pixel signals D 1 r , D 1 g , and D 1 b in a video signal D 1 is divided by the highest signal level output from the Max selection section 71 .
  • the selection output section 73 selects a part of the divided values of the pixel signals D 1 r , D 1 g , and D 1 b output from the division section 72 , and outputs the selected part to each of LUTs 74 R, 74 G, and 74 B. Specifically, the selection output section 73 outputs the divided values of the pixel signals D 1 g and D 1 b individually to the LUT 74 R, outputs the divided values of the pixel signals D 1 r and D 1 b individually to the LUT 74 G, and outputs the divided values of the pixel signals D 1 r and D 1 g individually to the LUT 74 B.
  • the LUTs 74 R, 74 G, and 74 B are LUTs in which hue H and saturation S in chromaticity of the video signal D 1 , and inverse of the corresponding highest expressible signal level (1/value V) are related. This is because, as mentioned above, the ratio obtained by dividing a pixel signal by the signal level having the highest expressible value is used when calculating back light luminance, so that the use of the inverse of value V leads to a simple configuration.
  • signal level variation of the lighting signal BL 1 responding to chromaticity variation in the video signal D 1 be limited to equal to or lower than a predetermined threshold level.
  • portions (regions) shown, for example, by symbols P 31 in FIG. 18A and P 41 in FIG. 19A are preferably limited in the signal level variation as shown, for example, by symbols P 32 in FIG. 18B and P 42 in FIG. 19B .
  • a liquid crystal display apparatus includes a liquid crystal display panel having a pixel 20 - 1 described below in place of the liquid crystal display panel 2 having the pixel 20 in the liquid crystal display apparatus 1 of the embodiment.
  • FIGS. 20A and 20B are schematic plan views illustrating exemplary configurations of sub-pixels of each pixel 20 - 1 according to the modification 3.
  • FIGS. 20A and 20B correspond to FIGS. 2A and 2B , respectively.
  • Each pixel 20 - 1 includes the same sub-pixels 20 R, 20 G, and 20 B corresponding to three colors of R, G, and B as in the embodiment, and a sub-pixel 20 Z which shows luminance higher than those of the three colors.
  • the color (Z) which shows the high luminance includes yellow (Y), white (W), and the like, and, in the modification 3, the color (Z) is described as a broader concept of these exemplified colors.
  • the sub-pixels 20 R, 20 G, 20 B, and 20 Z of four colors of R, G, B, and Z are provided with, as in the embodiment, the color filters 24 R, 24 G, and 24 B corresponding to each color of R, G, and B, respectively.
  • the layout of each of the sub-pixels 20 R, 20 G, 20 B, and 20 Z is not limited to these examples, and other layouts may be adopted.
  • liquid crystal display apparatus in the modification 3 configured in this manner, it is possible to obtain the same effects as in the liquid crystal display apparatus 1 of the embodiment, through the same functions. More specifically, in the case where a video display is performed with use of the sub-pixel structure of four colors of R, G, B, and Z, it is possible to realize in a simple configuration a dimming processing while suppressing lowering of image quality due to color shift.
  • the series of processing described in the embodiment and so forth may be carried out by hardware or software.
  • the program configuring the software is installed to the general-purpose computer or the like.
  • the program may be stored in advance in the recording medium incorporated in the computer.

Landscapes

  • Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • Computer Hardware Design (AREA)
  • Signal Processing (AREA)
  • Chemical & Material Sciences (AREA)
  • Crystallography & Structural Chemistry (AREA)
  • Physics & Mathematics (AREA)
  • Multimedia (AREA)
  • General Physics & Mathematics (AREA)
  • Theoretical Computer Science (AREA)
  • Liquid Crystal Display Device Control (AREA)
  • Control Of Indicators Other Than Cathode Ray Tubes (AREA)
  • Liquid Crystal (AREA)
  • Devices For Indicating Variable Information By Combining Individual Elements (AREA)

Abstract

A LCD display includes a light source section, a LCD panel including a plurality of pixels each having sub-pixels of R, G, B, and Z, and a display control section including an output signal generation section. The display control section performs a display drive on the sub-pixels with use of the respective output video signals, and performs a lighting drive on the light source section with use of the lighting signal. The output signal generation section generates output video signals corresponding to the respective four colors, based on the input video signals, and generates a lighting signal of the light source section, based on the input video signals, to perform a predetermined dimming processing, based on both the input video signals and the generated lighting signal, and finally generates the output video signals through performing a predetermined color conversion processing, based on a resultant video signal from the dimming processing.

Description

BACKGROUND
The present disclosure relates to a liquid crystal display apparatus having a sub-pixel structure made up of sub-pixels of four colors of red (R), green (G), blue (B), and white (W), for example.
In recent years, as a display for flat-screen televisions and portable terminals, an active-matrix liquid crystal display (LCD) apparatus in which TFT (Thin Film Transistor) is disposed in each pixel is often used. In such a liquid crystal display apparatus, generally, a video signal is line-sequentially written to a subsidiary capacitive device and a liquid crystal device of each pixel from the upper portion to the lower portion of the screen, thereby driving each pixel.
In the past, in order to lower power consumption of a liquid crystal display apparatus during video display, configurations in which each of pixels in a liquid crystal display panel includes sub-pixels of four colors (see Japanese Examined Patent Application Publication No. Hei 4-54207, Japanese Unexamined Patent Application Publication No. Hei 04-355722, and Japanese Patent No. 4354491, for example) have been proposed. Here, the sub-pixels of four colors include sub-pixels of three colors, red (R), green (G), blue (B), and a sub-pixel of a color higher in luminance than the three colors (Z; white (W) or yellow (Y), for example). When a video display is carried out using video signals for such sub-pixels of four colors, luminance efficiency can be enhanced in comparison with the case where a video display is carried out by supplying video signals for three colors to each pixel having a known sub-pixel structure of three colors of R, G, and B.
Meanwhile, in Japanese Patent No. 4354491, a liquid crystal display apparatus in which luminance of a back light is actively (dynamically) controlled (dimming processing is carried out) according to a video to be displayed (according to a signal level of a video signal) has been proposed. When using this method, it is possible to realize lower power consumption and expansion of dynamic range while keeping a display luminance.
SUMMARY
Incidentally, in a liquid crystal display apparatus, a light incident on a liquid crystal layer from a back light is modulated according to the signal level of a video signal, and a light amount (luminance) of transmitted light (display light) is controlled. It is known that spectroscopic characteristic of the transmitted light from the liquid crystal layer generally shows gradation dependency, and transmittance peak shifts to the short wavelength side (blue light side) as the signal level of the video signal lowers. In the known sub-pixel structure of three colors of R, G, and B, color filters for selectively transmitting light of predetermined wavelength region is disposed in each sub-pixel. Therefore, even if a chromaticity point at the maximum signal level in each of video signals for each color is set as a reference, the above mentioned wavelength shift of transmittance peak is not a major problem.
Meanwhile, in a liquid crystal display apparatus using the above mentioned sub-pixel structure of four colors, a sub-pixel of Z shows high luminance characteristic, so that spectroscopic characteristic of transmitted light from the sub-pixel of Z largely changes according to a signal level of a video signal. Therefore, a chromaticity point of transmitted light (display light) from whole pixels also largely shifts in response to the signal level of the video signal. In particular, when a sub-pixel of W is employed as the sub-pixel of Z, since no color filter is disposed in the sub-pixel of W, variation of the chromaticity point of the display light according to the signal level is large. For example, when cell thickness and drive voltage in the sub-pixel of W is so set that a transmittance in a sub-pixel of W shows relatively high liquid crystal spectroscopic characteristic, in other words, that a transmittance peak is in the vicinity of a wavelength region of G, the result is as follows. That is, at a signal level lower than the maximum signal level in the sub-pixel of W, a transmittance peak is located in the wavelength region of B.
As described, when a variation of a transmittance peak occurs in a sub-pixel of W according to a signal level, the liquid crystal display apparatus having the sub-pixel structure of four colors of R, G, B, and Z shows a nonlinearity as follows. Specifically, the nonlinearity is shown in a relationship between a signal level of a Z-sub-pixel video signal (Z signal), and, in the case where the signal level of the Z-sub-pixel video signal is replaced by a set of R-, G-, and B-sub-pixel intermediate video signals.
If the above mentioned active control (dimming processing) of the back light luminance is carried out in the case where just-mentioned nonlinearity is shown, in some cases, a signal level of a video signal also nonlinearly changes to cause a variation (color shift) of a chromaticity point, thereby lowering image quality. In addition, in order to suppress the lowering in image quality due to the color shift, a complicate arithmetic processing for the nonlinearity becomes necessary upon signal processing, which leads to a complicate device configuration.
For the reasons described above, in the known liquid crystal display apparatus, when carrying out a video display using a sub-pixel structure of four colors of R, G, B, and Z, it is difficult to realize a dimming process, by a simple configuration, while at the same time reducing the lowering in image quality due to color shift, and therefore there is a need for a method for improvement.
The present disclosure has been made in view of the above circumstances and provides a liquid crystal display apparatus which can realize, in a simple configuration, a dimming processing while suppressing a lowering of image quality due to color shift in the case of performing a video display using a sub-pixel structure of four colors of R, G, B, and Z.
A liquid crystal display apparatus according to an embodiment of the disclosure includes: a light source section; a liquid crystal display panel including a plurality of pixels each of which having sub-pixels of three colors of red (R), green (G), and blue (B), and a sub-pixel of a color (Z) showing luminance higher than those of the three colors, the liquid crystal display panel being configured to modulate light emitted from the light source section, based on input video signals corresponding to the respective three colors of R, G, and B to perform a video display; and a display control section including an output signal generation section adapted to generate, based on the input video signals, output video signals corresponding to the respective four colors of R, G, B, and Z, and to generate a lighting signal of the light source section, the display control section being configured to perform a display drive on the sub-pixels of R, G, B, and Z in the liquid crystal display panel with use of the respective output video signals, and perform a lighting drive on the light source section with use of the lighting signal. The output signal generation section generates the lighting signal, based on the input video signals, to carry out a predetermined dimming processing, based on both the input video signals and the generated lighting signal, and the output signal generation section generates the output video signals through carrying out, based on a resultant video signal from the dimming processing, a predetermined color conversion processing.
In the liquid crystal display apparatus of the present disclosure, output video signals corresponding to respective four colors of R, G, B, and Z and a lighting signal of the light source section are generated based on input video signals corresponding to respective three colors of R, G, and B, a display drive of each of the sub-pixels of R, G, B, and Z is carried out with use of the output video signals, and a lighting drive on the light source section is carried out with use of the lighting signal. In this case, the lighting signal is generated based on the input video signals, and a predetermined dimming processing is carried out based on both the input video signals and the lighting signal, and thereafter, a predetermined color conversion processing based on a resultant video signal from the dimming processing is carried out, to thereby generate the output video signals. In other words, the generation and the dimming processing of the lighting signal are carried out to the input video signals which correspond to the three colors of R, G, and B, and thereafter, a color conversion processing is carried out to generate the output video signals which correspond to four colors of R, G, B, and Z. By this procedure, as opposed to the case where the generation and the dimming processing of the lighting signal are carried out after the video signals R, G, B, and Z are generated by the color conversion processing, the color shift of the display light due to variation of peak wavelength region in irradiating light from the sub-pixel of Z (nonlinearity in a relationship between a signal level of a Z-sub-pixel video signal (Z signal), and a signal level of each of R-, G-, B-sub-pixel intermediate video signals in the case where the signal level of the Z-sub-pixel video signal is replaced by a set of the R-, G-, and B-sub-pixel video signals) is suppressed with a simple arithmetic processing (dimming processing).
According to the liquid crystal display apparatus of the present disclosure, the lighting signal is generated based on the input video signals corresponding to respective three colors of R, G, and B, and a predetermined dimming processing is carried out based on the input video signals and the lighting signal, and thereafter, a predetermined color conversion processing is carried out based on a resultant video signal from the dimming processing, to thereby generate the output video signals corresponding to respective four colors of R, G, B, and Z, so that it is possible to reduce the color shift of the display light due to the nonlinearity with a simple arithmetic processing (dimming processing). Therefore, when a video display is carried out using a sub-pixel structure of four colors of R, G, B, and Z, it is possible to realize a dimming processing while lowering of image quality due to color shift is suppressed with a simple configuration.
It is to be understood that both the foregoing general description and the following detailed description are exemplary, and are intended to provide further explanation of the technology as claimed.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
The accompanying drawings are included to provide a further understanding of the disclosure, and are incorporated in and constitute a part of this specification. The drawings illustrate embodiments and, together with the specification, serve to explain the principles of the technology.
FIG. 1 is a block diagram illustrating a general configuration of a liquid crystal display apparatus according to an embodiment of the present disclosure.
FIGS. 2A and 2B are schematic plan views illustrating exemplary sub-pixel structures of the pixel shown in FIG. 1.
FIG. 3 is a circuit diagram illustrating a specific configuration example of the sub-pixels shown in FIGS. 2A and 2B.
FIG. 4 is a block diagram illustrating a specific configuration of an output signal generation section shown in FIG. 1.
FIG. 5 is a block diagram illustrating a specific configuration of an RGB/RGBW conversion section shown in FIG. 4.
FIGS. 6A and 6B are characteristic charts for describing an example of a limiting processing of a signal level when the RGB/RGBW conversion is carried out.
FIG. 7 is a characteristic chart illustrating an example of wavelength dependency of spectral transmittance according to a signal level of W signal according to a comparative example.
FIG. 8 is a characteristic chart illustrating an example of wavelength dependency of spectral transmittance in each sub-pixel of R, G, B, and W according to the comparative example.
FIG. 9 is a characteristic chart illustrating an example of ideal color reproduction characteristic in an RGBW sub-pixel structure in HSV color space.
FIG. 10 is a characteristic chart illustrating an example of color reproduction characteristic in the RGBW sub-pixel structure according to the comparative example in HSV color space.
FIG. 11 is a characteristic chart illustrating an example of a relationship between a signal level of the W signal and signal levels of R, G, and B in the case where the signal level of W is replaced by a set of R-, G-, and B-sub-pixel intermediate video signal in the RGBW sub-pixel structure according to the comparative example.
FIGS. 12A and 12B are characteristic charts illustrating an example of a common LUT which is used in a BL level calculation section according to a modification 1.
FIG. 13 is a block diagram illustrating a specific configuration example of a BL level calculation section according to a modification 2.
FIG. 14 is a characteristic chart illustrating an example of a LUT for R which is used in the BL level calculation section shown in FIG. 13.
FIG. 15 is a characteristic chart illustrating an example of a LUT for G which is used in the BL level calculation section shown in FIG. 13.
FIG. 16 is a characteristic chart illustrating an example of a LUT for B which is used in the BL level calculation section shown in FIG. 13.
FIGS. 17A and 17B are characteristic charts illustrating another example of a LUT for R which is used in the BL level calculation section shown in FIG. 13.
FIGS. 18A and 18B are characteristic charts illustrating another example of a LUT for G which is used in the BL level calculation section shown in FIG. 13.
FIGS. 19A and 19B are characteristic chart illustrating another example of a LUT for B which is used in the BL level calculation section shown in FIG. 13.
FIGS. 20A and 20B are schematic plan views illustrating exemplary sub-pixel structures of a pixel according to a modification 3.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS
Hereinafter, an embodiment of the present disclosure will be specifically described with reference to the drawings. The description will be made in the following order.
1. Embodiment (example of liquid crystal display apparatus using RGBW panel)
2. Modification
Modification 1 (example in which common LUT is used between R, G, and B in BL level calculation section)
Modification 2 (example in which individual LUTs are used for each of R, G, and B in BL level calculation section)
Modification 3 (example of liquid crystal display apparatus using RGBZ panel)
Embodiment General Configuration of Liquid Crystal Display Apparatus 1
FIG. 1 is a block diagram illustrating a general configuration of a liquid crystal display apparatus 1 according to an embodiment of the present disclosure.
The liquid crystal display apparatus 1 carries out a video display based on an input video signal Din which is externally input. The liquid crystal display apparatus 1 includes a liquid crystal display panel 2, a back light 3 (light source section), a video signal processing section 41, an output signal generation section 42, a timing control section 43, a back light driving section 50, a data driver 51, and a gate driver 52. Among them, the video signal processing section 41, the output signal generation section 42, the timing control section 43, the back light driving section 50, the data driver 51, and the gate driver 52 correspond to a specific example of “a display control section” of the present disclosure.
The liquid crystal display panel 2 modulates light emitted from the back light 3 (described later) based on an input video signal Din to carry out a video display based on the input video signal Din. The liquid crystal display panel 2 includes a plurality of pixels 20 arranged in a matrix as a whole.
FIGS. 2A and 2B are schematic plan views each illustrating an exemplary sub-pixel structure in each pixel 20. Each pixel 20 has, a sub-pixel 20R corresponding to red (R), a sub-pixel 20G corresponding to green (G), a sub-pixel 20B corresponding to blue (B), and a sub-pixel 20W corresponding to white (W) which is higher in luminance than these three colors. Of these sub-pixels 20R, 20G, 20B, and 20W of four colors of R, G, B, and W, the sub-pixels 20R, 20G, and 20B respectively corresponding to three colors of R, G, and B have color filters 24R, 24G, and 24B respectively corresponding to colors of R, G, and B. In other words, the color filter 24R corresponding to R is disposed to the sub-pixel 20R corresponding to R, the color filter 24G corresponding to G is disposed to the sub-pixel 20G corresponding to G, the color filter 24B corresponding to B is disposed to the sub-pixel 20B corresponding to B. On the other hand, no color filter is disposed to the sub-pixel 20W corresponding to W.
Here, in the example shown in FIG. 2A, in the pixel 20, four sub-pixels of 20R, 20G, 20B, and 20W are disposed in a line in this order (along horizontal direction (H), for example). On the other hand, in the example shown in FIG. 2B, in the pixel 20, four sub-pixels of 20R, 20G, 20B, and 20W are disposed in matrix of 2 rows×2 columns. It is to be noted that the arrangement of four sub-pixels 20R, 20G, 20B, and 20W in the pixel 20 is not limited to these examples and other arrangement may be adopted.
Due to the sub-pixel structure of four colors, in the pixel 20 of the embodiment, luminance efficiency of video display can be enhanced compared with the case of the sub-pixel structure of three colors of R, G, and B. Details will be described later.
FIG. 3 illustrates an exemplary circuit configuration of a pixel circuit in each of the sub-pixels 20R, 20G, 20B, and 20W. Each of the sub-pixels 20R, 20G, 20B, and 20W has a liquid crystal device 22, a TFT device 21, and a subsidiary capacitive device 23. To each of the sub-pixel 20R, 20G, 20B, and 20W, a gate line G for line-sequentially selecting a pixel to be driven, a data line D for supplying to a pixel to be driven a video voltage (a video voltage supplied from the data driver 51 described later), and a subsidiary capacitive line Cs are connected.
The liquid crystal device 22 carries out a display operation according to a video voltage supplied to one end thereof from the data line D through the TFT device 21. The liquid crystal device 22 is a device in which a liquid crystal layer (not shown) made up of a liquid crystal such as VA (Vertical Alignment) mode liquid crystal or TN (Twisted Nematic) mode liquid crystal is sandwiched between a pair of electrodes (not shown). One of, or one end of, the pair of electrodes in the liquid crystal device 22 is connected to a drain of the TFT device 21 and one end of the subsidiary capacitive device 23, the other of, or the other end of, the pair of electrodes is grounded. The subsidiary capacitive device 23 is a capacitive device for stabilizing an accumulated charge of the liquid crystal device 22. One end of the subsidiary capacitive device 23 is connected to one end of the liquid crystal device 22 and the drain of the TFT device 21, and the other end is connected to the subsidiary capacitive line Cs. The TFT device 21 is a switching device for supplying, to both of one end of the liquid crystal device 22 and one end of the subsidiary capacitive device 23, a video voltage based on a video signal D1, and is a MOS-FET (Metal Oxide Semiconductor-Field Effect Transistor). A gate and a source of the TFT device 21 are connected to the gate line G and the data line D, respectively, and the drain of the TFT device 21 is connected to both of one end of the liquid crystal device 22 and one end of the subsidiary capacitive device 23.
The back light 3 is a light source section for irradiating light to the liquid crystal display panel 2, and is made up of, for example, Cold Cathode Fluorescent Lamp (CCFL), Light Emitting Diode (LED), or the like as a light emitting device. The back light 3 carries out a lighting drive (active control or dynamic control of luminance) according to a luminance level or signal level of an input video signal Din, and the detail will be described later.
The video signal processing section 41 carries out, for example, a predetermined image processing (e.g., sharpness processing, gamma correction, or the like) for improving image quality on an input video signal Din of the pixel signal corresponding to three primary colors of R, G, and B. By this, a video signal D1 of the pixel signal corresponding to three colors of R, G, and B (that is, a pixel signal D1 r for R, a pixel signal D1 g for G, and a pixel signal D1 b for B) is generated.
The output signal generation section 42 carries out a predetermined signal processing described later based on a video signal D1 (D1 r, D1 g, and D1 b) supplied from the video signal processing section 41. By this, a lighting signal BL1 which shows luminance level (lighting level) in the back light 3, and a video signal D4 (pixel signal D4 r for R, pixel signal D4 g for G, pixel signal D4 b for B, and pixel signal D4 w for W) or an output video signal are generated. In this case, in the embodiment, the lighting signal BL1 is generated based on the video signal D1, and a predetermined dimming processing described later is carried out based on the video signal D1 and the generated lighting signal BL1. Then, a predetermined color conversion processing described later is carried out based on the resultant video signal from the dimming processing (video signal D2 described later), thereby generating a video signal D4. It is to be noted that, specific configuration of the output signal generation section 42 will be described later (FIG. 4 to FIG. 6B).
The timing control section 43 controls the drive timing of the back light driving section 50, the gate driver 52, and the data driver 51, and supplies a video signal D4 supplied from the output signal generation section 42 to the data driver 51.
According to the timing control by the timing control section 43, the gate driver 52 line-sequentially drives each of the pixels 20 (each of sub-pixels 20R, 20G, 20B, and 20W) in the liquid crystal display panel 2 along the gate line G. On the other hand, the data driver 51 supplies the video voltage based on the video signal D4 supplied from the timing control section 43 to each of the pixels 20 (each of the sub-pixels 20R, 20G, 20B, and 20W) of the liquid crystal display panel 2. In other words, the data driver 51 supplies the pixel signal D4 r for R to the sub-pixel 20R, supplies the pixel signal D4 g for G to the sub-pixel 20G, supplies the pixel signal D4 b for B to the sub-pixel 20B, and supplies the pixel signal D4 w for W to the sub-pixel 20W. More specifically, the data driver 51 converts the video signal D4 from digital to analog (D/A) to generate a video signal (above mentioned video voltage) as an analog signal, and outputs the resulting signal to each of the pixels 20 (each of the sub-pixels 20R, 20G, 20B, and 20W). In this manner, the display drive of each of the pixels 20 (each of the sub-pixels 20R, 20G, 20B, and 20W) in the liquid crystal display panel 2 based on the video signal D4 is carried out.
According to the timing control performed by the timing control section 43, the back light driving section 50 carries out a lighting drive (lighting drive) of the back light 3 based on the lighting signal BL1 output from the output signal generation section 42. Specifically, a lighting drive (active control or dynamic control of luminance) according to the luminance level or signal level of the input video signal Din is carried out, and the detail will be described later.
[Specific Configuration of Output Signal Generation Section 42]
Next, with reference to FIG. 4 to FIG. 6B, a specific configuration of the output signal generation section 42 will be described. FIG. 4 illustrates a block configuration of the output signal generation section 42. The output signal generation section 42 has a BL level calculation section 421, an LCD level calculation section 422, a chromaticity point adjustment section 423, and an RGB/RGBW conversion section 424.
The BL level calculation section 421 generates a lighting signal BL1 in the back light 3 based on a video signal D1 (D1 r, D1 g, and D1 b). Specifically, the BL level calculation section 421 analyses a luminance level (signal level) of the video signal D1 to obtain a lighting signal BL1 corresponding to the luminance level. Specifics of the generating operation for the lighting signal BL1 in the BL level calculation section 421 will be described later.
Based on the video signal D1 (D1 r, D1 g, and D1 b) and the lighting signal BL1 output from the BL level calculation section 421, the LCD level calculation section 422 generates a video signal D2 (pixel signal D2 r for R, pixel signal D2 g for G, and pixel signal D2 b for B). Specifically, the LCD level calculation section 422 carries out a predetermined dimming processing (here, the signal level of the video signal D1 is divided by the signal level of the lighting signal BL1) based on the video signal D1 and the lighting signal BL1 to generate the video signal D2. To be more precise, the LCD level calculation section 422 generates the video signal D2 with use of the following expressions (1) to (3).
D2r=(D1r/BL1)  (1)
D2g=(D1g/BL1)  (2)
D2b=(D1b/BL1)  (3)
The chromaticity point adjustment section 423 carries out a predetermined chromaticity point adjustment of a video signal D2 (D2 r, D2 g, and D2 b) to generate a video signal D3 (D3 r, D3 g, and D3 b). Specifically, when a video signal D2 (D1) is a video signal indicating white (W), the chromaticity point adjustment is carried out so that a chromaticity point of display light emitted from the liquid crystal display panel 2 based on emitted light from the back light 3 is white chromaticity point. Incidentally, “when a video signal D2 (D1) is a video signal indicating white (W)” corresponds to the case when a luminance level (signal level or luminance gradation) of each of the pixel signals D2 r, D2 g, and D2 b (D1 r, D1 g, and D1 b) is at the maximum value.
In this case, the chromaticity point adjustment section 423 carries out a chromaticity point adjustment with use of, for example, a transformation matrix Md2d3 specified by the following expression (4). In other words, the video signal D2 (pixel signals D2 r, D2 g, and D2 b) is multiplied by the transformation matrix Md2d3, in other words, a matrix operation is carried out, thereby generating the video signal D3 (pixel signals D3 r, D3 g, and D3 b). Here, as shown in expression (4), the transformation matrix Md2d3 can be obtained by multiplying the transformation matrix Md2XYZ by the transformation matrix MXYZd3 (matrix operation). The transformation matrix Md2XYZ is a transformation matrix from the video signal D2 to the tristimulus values (X, Y, Z) in the white color chromaticity point. On the other hand, the transformation matrix MXYZd3 is a transformation matrix from this tristimulus values (X, Y, Z) to the video signal D3, and can be obtained with use of the following expression (5). In this expression (5), (Xw, Yw, Zw) represent tristimulus values in the sub-pixel 20W, and (Wr, Wg, Wb) represent the signal level of each sub-pixel intermediate video signal in the case where the signal level of the video signal (W signal) for the sub-pixel 20W is replaced by a set of the intermediate video signals for each of the sub-pixels 20R, 20G, and 20B.
[ Expression 1 ] M d 2 -> d 3 = ( M d 2 -> XYZ ) × ( M XYZ -> d 3 ) ( 4 ) ( W r W g W b ) = M XYZ -> d 3 ( X w Y w Z w ) ( 5 )
[A: RGB/RGBW Conversion Section 424]
The RGB/RGBW conversion section 424 carries out a predetermined RGB/RGBW conversion processing (color conversion processing) on the video signal D3 (D3 r, D3 g, and D3 b) which corresponds to the three colors of R, G, and B and is output from the chromaticity point adjustment section 423. Thus, a video signal D4 (D4 r, D4 g, D4 b, and D4 w) corresponding to four colors of R, G, B, and W is generated.
FIG. 5 illustrates a block configuration of the RGB/RGBW conversion section 424. The RGB/RGBW conversion section 424 has LUTs (Look-Up Tables) 61R, 61G, and 61B for each color of R, G, and B; a Min selection section 62; LUTs 63R, 63G, and 63B for each color of R, G, and B; a Max selection section 64; a Min selection section 65; LUTs 66R, 66G, and 66B for each color of R, G, and B; and subtraction sections 67R, 67G, and 67B.
It is to be noted that, here, the pixel signals D3 r, D3 g, and D3 b, which are input signals, are described as Sr, Sg, and Sb, respectively. In addition, the LUTs 61R, 61G, and 61B are LUTs which respectively correspond to inverse functions invfr, invfg, and invfb described later. Therefore, in the figure, the LUTs 61R, 61G, and 61B are respectively shown as “Invfr-LUT”, “Invfg-LUT”, and “Invfb-LUT”. Likewise, the LUTs 63R, 63G, and 63B are LUTs which respectively correspond to inverse functions invFr, invFg, and invFb described later. Therefore, in the figure, the LUTs 63R, 63G, and 63B are respectively shown as “InvFr-LUT”, “InvFg-LUT”, and “InvFb-LUT”. Further, LUTs 66R, 66G, and 66B are LUTs which respectively correspond to functions fr, fg, and fb described later. Therefore, in the figure, the LUTs 66R, 66G, and 66B are respectively shown as fr-LUT, fg-LUT, and fb-LUT.
[Expression for Computation in Conversion Process]
Firstly, in the RGB/RGBW conversion processing, Look-Up Tables (LUTs) representing which set of signal levels can realize the process, when a signal level of a video signal D4 w (Sw) for a sub-pixel 20W is replaced by a set of the intermediate video signals for sub-pixels 20R, 20G, and 20B (which correspond to above-mentioned Wr, Wg, and Wb, respectively), is used. In other words, LUTs 66R, 66G, and 66B (first LUT) which are LUTs prepared according to nonlinearity (nonlinearity in a relationship between a signal level of Sw and signal levels of Wr, Wg, and Wb) to be described later and shown in FIG. 11, are used.
Here, if functions corresponding to the LUTs 66R, 66G, and 66B are respectively denoted by fr (Sw), fg (Sw), and fb (Sw), then the RGB/RGBW conversion in the RGB/RGBW conversion section 424 can be expressed by the following formula (6). It is to be noted that, signal levels of pixel signals D4 r (=Sr−fr (Sw)), D4 g (=Sg−fg (Sw)), D4 b (=Sb−fb (Sw)), and D4 w (=Sw) after the RGB/RGBW conversion have to be a positive value. For this reason, it is necessary to satisfy the following conditional expressions (7) to (9).
[Expression 2]
(S r ,S g ,S b)→(S r −f r(S w),S g −f g(S w),Sb−fb(S w),S w)  (6)
S r ≧f r(S w)  (7)
S g ≧f g(S w)  (8)
S b ≧f b(S w).  (9)
In order to satisfy the conditional expressions (7) to (9), inverse functions invfr (Sr), invfg (Sg), and invfb (Sb) respectively corresponding to the functions fr (Sw), fg (Sw), and fb (Sw) are used. In other words, LUTs 61R, 61G, and 61B respectively corresponding to the inverse function invfr (Sr), invfg (Sg), and invfb (Sb) are provided. In each of the LUTs 61R, 61G, and 61B, when signal levels of inputs (Sr, Sg, and Sb) exceed the maximum value of each color in the vertical axis in the graph shown in FIG. 11, the maximum value of Sw (=1.0) will be output. Also in the case where, for example, a turning point exists as the curve of Wb in FIG. 11 indicates, when the maximum value in the vertical axis is exceeded, the maximum value of Sw (=1.0) will be output. In other words, if there is a turning point and there exist two solutions of inverse function, then the solution of the smaller value of the two solutions will be output.
In this case, if the smallest value in the values of the inverse functions invfr (Sr), invfg (Sg), and invfb (Sb) is denoted by Sw_1, the above described conditional expressions (7) to (9) will be satisfied by selecting a W signal Sw smaller in value than Sw_1. In other words, if the conditional expression (10) shown below is satisfied, the signal level of each of pixel signals D4 r, D4 g, D4 b, and D4 w (Sw) after the RGB/RGBW conversion is positive value.
[Expression 3]
S w ≧S w 1=Min(invf r(S r),invf g(S g),invf b(S b))  (10)
In this case, in a pixel 20 which shows the highest luminance level in the pixels 20 of the liquid crystal display panel 2, the signal level of each of pixel signals D4 r, D4 g, D4 b, and D4 w after the RGB/RGBW conversion will also be near 1.0, which is the upper limit. Therefore, if the signal level of the pixel signal D4 w (W signal Sw) is changed, the signal level will exceed upper limit, which means the W signal Sw will be uniquely determined and there is no degree of freedom in signal level. On the other hand, pixels 20, other than the pixel showing the highest luminance level in all of the pixels 20 of the liquid crystal display panel 2, have a degree of freedom in the signal level of W signal Sw, in a range of the condition (restriction) specified by the expression (10) and the restriction that the signal level of each pixel signals D4 r, D4 g, D4 b, and D4 w is 1.0, which is the upper limit of them, or lower. Therefore, in such pixels 20, in order to uniquely determine the signal level of the W signal Sw, another constraint condition may be required in addition to the expression (10).
In the other constraint condition, in this case, the signal level (signal amplitude) of each of pixel signals D4 r, D4 g, D4 b, and D4 w should be at the smallest level. Also in this constraint condition, in the sub-pixels 20R, 20G, 20B, and 20W in the pixel 20, display light is emitted in such a manner that there is no unevenness in luminance (in such a manner as to make luminance even) as far as possible, thereby advantageously making it possible to reduce graininess (graininess caused by sub-pixel structure) of the image when displayed in one color. In view of this, as will be described below, it can be desirable that an RGB/RGBW conversion processing be carried out in the RGB/RGBW conversion section 424 so that signal levels of pixel signals D4 r, D4 g, D4 b, and D4 w making up the video signal D4 are substantially equal to each other.
In this instance, when the signal level (signal amplitude) of each of pixel signals D4 r, D4 g, D4 b, and D4 w is at the lowest level, then the highest signal level in the signal levels of the pixel signals D4 r, D4 g, and D4 b and the signal level of pixel signal D4 w (W signal Sw) are equal to each other. If there is such a W signal Sw within the range below the Sw_1 described earlier, then that is the signal level of W signal which satisfies the other constraint condition.
In view of this, firstly, in the condition where each of the signal levels of the pixel signals D4 r, D4 g, and D4 b and the signal level of the W signal Sw are equal to each other, the signal level of the W signal is evaluated. The solution in this case will be equal to the highest signal level in the pixel signals D4 r, D4 g, and D4 b, so that the solution will be the one having the highest level in the above described solutions. This can be expressed by the following expressions (11) to (14). Next, in order to obtain these solutions in a simple way, functions Fr (Sw), Fg (Sw), and Fb (Sw) set by the following expressions (14) to (16) are provided. The signal level Sw_2 of W signal, which is evaluated by the following expression (17) using inverse functions invFr (Sw), invFg (Sw), and invFb (Sw) respectively corresponding to the functions Fr (Sw), Fg (Sw), and Fb (Sw), is the signal level of W signal which satisfies the other constraint condition. In other words, the highest value in the values of inverse functions invFr (Sw), invFg (Sw), and invFb (Sw) is the Sw_2. Here, when it is assumed that this Sw_2 is the solution, a condition (Sw_2<Sw_1) that the signal level after the RGB/RGBW conversion has positive value may be required to be satisfied. However, in the case where Sw_2 is higher than Sw_1, in order to lower the signal level (signal amplitude) of each of pixel signals D4 r, D4 g, D4 b, and D4 w as much as possible, Sw_2 which makes one of the pixel signals D4 r, D4 g, and D4 b into “0” will be selected. Therefore, the W signal Sw finally evaluated upon an RGB/RGBW conversion processing is expressed by the following expression (18). In other words, of Sw_1 and Sw_2, the signal level having the lower value (the lowest value) is W signal Sw.
[Expression 4]
S r −f r(S w)=S w  (11)
S g −f g(S w)=S w  (12)
S b −f b(S w)=S w  (13)
F r(S w)=S w +f r(S w)  (14)
F g(S w)=S w +f g(S w)  (15)
F b(S w)=S w +f b(S w)  (16)
S w 2=Max(invF r(S r),invF g(S g),invF b(S b))  (17)
S w=Min(S w 1 ,S w 2)  (18)
[Description of Blocks]
Now, based on the foregoing description, blocks in RGB/RBGW conversion section 424 will be described.
A LUT 61R is a LUT which corresponds to the above described inverse function invfr (Sr), and outputs a value (signal level) indicated by the inverse function invfr (Sr) in response to input of a pixel signal D3 r (Sr). Likewise, a LUT 61G is a LUT which corresponds to the above described inverse function invfg (Sg), and outputs a value (signal level) indicated by the inverse function invfg (Sg) in response to input of a pixel signal D3 g (Sg). Likewise, a LUT 61B is a LUT which corresponds to the above described inverse function invfb (Sb), and outputs a value (signal level) indicated by the inverse function invfb (Sb) in response to input of a pixel signal D3 b (Sb).
A Min selection section 62 is a section in which an arithmetic processing corresponding to the above described expression (10) is carried out, and from values (signal levels) output from LUTs 61R, 61G, and 61B, the signal level having the lowest value is selected and output as Sw_1.
A LUT 63R is a LUT which corresponds to the above described inverse function invFr (Sr), and outputs a value (signal level) indicated by the inverse function invFr (Sr) in response to input of a pixel signal D3 r (Sr). Likewise, a LUT 63G is a LUT which corresponds to the above described inverse function invFg (Sg), and outputs a value (signal level) indicated by the inverse function invFg (Sg) in response to input of a pixel signal D3 g (Sg). Likewise, a LUT 63B is a LUT which corresponds to the above described inverse function invFb (Sb), and outputs a value (signal level) indicated by the inverse function invFb (Sb) in response to input of a pixel signal D3 b (Sb).
A Max selection section 64 is a section in which an arithmetic processing corresponding to the above described expression (17) is carried out, and from values (signal levels) output from LUTs 63R, 63G, and 63B, the signal level having the highest value is selected and output as Sw_2.
A Min selection section 65 is a portion in which an arithmetic processing corresponding the above described expression (18) is carried out, and from Sw_1 and Sw_2, the signal level having the lowest value (lower value) is selected and output as Sw.
A LUT 66R is a LUT which corresponds to the above described function fr (Sw), and outputs a value (signal level) indicated by the function fr (Sw) in response to input of a W signal Sw. Likewise, a LUT 66G is a LUT which corresponds to the above described function fg (Sw), and outputs a value (signal level) indicated by the function fg (Sw) in response to input of a W signal Sw. Likewise, a LUT 66B is a LUT which corresponds to the above described function fb (Sw), and outputs a value (signal level) indicated by the function fb (Sw) in response to input of a W signal Sw.
A subtraction section 67R subtracts the output (fr (Sw)) of the LUT 66R from a pixel signal D3 r (Sr), and thus a pixel signal D4 r (=Sr−fr (Sw)) is generated. Likewise, a subtraction section 67G subtracts the output (fg (Sw)) of the LUT 66G from a pixel signal D3 g (Sg), and thus a pixel signal D4 g (=Sg−fg (Sw)) is generated. Likewise, a subtraction section 67B subtracts the output (fb (Sw)) of the LUT 66B from a pixel signal D3 b (Sb), and thus a pixel signal D4 b (=Sb−fb (Sw)) is generated.
[Signal Level Limiting Processing]
Although not shown in FIG. 5, it is desirable to carry out a processing for limiting a signal level during the RGB/RGBW conversion processing in the RGB/RGBW conversion section 424 so that a signal level of pixel signals D4 r, D4 g, D4 b, and D4 w does not exceed a predetermined upper limit (e.g., 1.0). The reason for this is as follows.
In a liquid crystal display panel having a sub-pixel structure of four colors of R, G, B, and W, the total number of sub-pixels is four thirds times larger than that in a liquid crystal display panel having a sub-pixel structure of three colors of R, G, and B, and therefore aperture ratio of each sub-pixel of the sub-pixel structure of four colors is relatively small. Thus, when electricity of the back light is even, display luminance of each sub-pixel in the sub-pixel structure of four colors tends to be relatively lower than luminance of each sub-pixel in the sub-pixel structure of three colors.
For example, if a correction in which each of the pixel signals D4 r, D4 g, D4 b, and D4 w after the RGB/RGBW conversion processing is multiplied by a predetermined gain coefficient is carried out, the signal level (luminance level) thereof may be made higher. However, in this case, if a video signal having a value near the maximum value (V) is multiplied by the gain coefficient, for example, the video signal may exceed a predetermined upper limit (e.g., 1.0). If a configuration where signals which exceed the upper limit are all (evenly) set to the upper limit is adopted, then a gradation thereof will be lost (gradation thereof will be roughened), causing a discontinuity in luminance gradation.
For the reasons described above, in the present embodiment, it is desirable to carried out the above-described limiting processing of signal level as follows. That is, for example, gain coefficient (shown in FIG. 6A) determined corresponding to the highest level in signal levels of video signals (pixel signals D4 r, D4 g, D4 b, and D4 w) is multiplied by each of the signals, thereby carrying out a correction (limiting processing) of signal levels. More specifically, when the signal level is above the threshold level, as shown by the arrow in the figure, the value of gain coefficient is gradually (here, linearly) decreased. Thus, as shown in FIG. 6B, for example, while the signal level of the video signal after the correction is made higher than before the correction, the signal level can be prevented from exceeding a predetermined upper limit (here, 1.0). In other words, by gradually decreasing the value of the gain coefficient according to the signal level, the increase rate of the signal level of the video signal after correction is gradually decreased, as shown by the arrow in the figure, and the upper limit can be reached exactly when the signal level before correction reaches the maximum value (here, 1.5). As a result, while avoiding the above described discontinuity in luminance gradation, the relative lowering of the display luminance due to the use of the sub-pixel structure of four colors of R, G, B, and W can be reduced.
It is to be noted that, technically, due to nonlinearity described later (nonlinearity in the relationship between the signal level of Sw and the signal levels of Wr, Wg, and Wb) as shown in FIG. 11, the multiplication of gain coefficient according to the present embodiment causes a change in chromaticity point. However, if the change is minute, there is no problem for practical use. In addition, if the upper limit on the output value of the above described LUTs 66R, 66G, and 66B is set to 1.0, the pixel signal D4 w (W signal Sw) can be prevented from exceeding the upper limit of 1.0, so that it is also possible to carry out the above described signal level limiting processing only on the pixel signals D4 r, D4 g, and D4 b.
[B: Expression for Computation in BL Level Calculation Section 421]
Next, expressions for computing a signal level of lighting signal BL1 in the above described BL level calculation section 421 are specifically described. In the present embodiment, the case where the BL level calculation section is realized by a circuit configuration as an example is described below.
If a relationship between a signal level of Sw (described later) and signal levels of Wr, Wg and Wb supposedly shows linearity (proportional relationship), not nonlinearity as shown in FIG. 11, for example, a video signal after RGB/RGBW conversion also shows nonlinearity. In that case, if the signal level is multiplied by constant after the signal level is converted to video signals corresponding to four colors of R, G, B, and W, chromaticity point will not be changed. For this reason, in that case, by carrying out an RGB/RGBW conversion in which the minimum signal level (signal amplitude) is given after the RGB/RGBW conversion, and dividing the upper limit (1.0) of the signal level by the minimum signal level, the signal level of the lighting signal BL1 can be obtained. However, in the present embodiment, as described before, the relationship between the signal level of Sw and the signal levels of Wr, Wg, and Wb shows, for example, nonlinearity as shown in FIG. 11. Therefore, in the present embodiment, the above described method is not usable in the case where the signal level of the lighting signal BL1 is to be computed.
In view of this, as described below, a method may be adopted in which a solution of expression is obtained so that the maximum value of a video signal D4 obtained through an RGB/RGBW conversion after the a video signal D3 output from the chromaticity point adjustment section 423 is multiplied by constant (k fold) is 1.0. Hereinafter, this method is described in four cases. It is to be noted that, in the description below, three colors composing the video signal are denoted as c1, c2, and c3, each of which corresponds to any of R, G, and B.
(1) A case where any of pixel signals of D4 r, D4 g, and D4 b obtained after an RGB/RGBW conversion is 1, and any of the other is 0.
In this case, as in the expressions (7) to (9), a solution can be obtained from a condition that all the pixel signals D4 r, D4 g, D4 b, and D4 w after an RGB/RGBW conversion have positive value. On the other hand, the pixel signal corresponding to one of the rest of the three colors c1 to c3 is a value within the range from 0 to 1, so that the following expressions (19) to (21) can be obtained. Of the expressions (19) to (21), with use of the expressions (19) and (20), the following expression (22) can be obtained. To solve the expression (22), firstly, function Gc1,c2(Sw) specified by the following expression (23) is defined. Subsequently, with respect to all combinations of colors, inverse function G−1 c1,c2(Sc1/Sc2) corresponding to function Gc1,c2(Sw) specified by the following expression (24) is obtained to prepare a Look-Up Table. Then, in the case where a value having the ratio of (Sc1/Sc2) exists within an input range in a Look-Up Table corresponding to the inverse function G−1 c1,c2(Sc1/Sc2), a W signal Sw and a multiplying factor k are obtained with use of the following expression (25). If the W signal Sw and the multiplying factor k thus obtained satisfy the above described expression (21), then the multiplying factor k is the maximum multiplying factor in question.
[ Expression 5 ] k · S c 1 - f c 1 ( S w ) = 0 ( 19 ) k · S c 2 - f c 2 ( S w ) = 1 ( 20 ) 0 { k · S c 3 - f c 3 ( S w ) } 1 ( 21 ) S c 1 S c 2 = f c 1 ( S w ) f c 2 ( S w ) + 1 ( 22 ) G c 1 · c 2 ( Sw ) = f c 1 ( S w ) f c 2 ( S w ) + 1 ( 23 ) S w = G c 1 , c 2 - 1 ( S c 1 S c 2 ) ( 24 ) k = f c ( S w ) S c = f c 1 ( S w ) + 1 S c 1 ( 25 )
(2) A case where each of a pixel signal D4 w and one of pixel signals D4 r, D4 g, and D4 b are 1.
In this case, a D4 w is 1, a pixel signal corresponding to one color of the c1 to c3 is 1, and pixel signals corresponding to remaining two colors are at a value in the range from 0 to 1. Therefore, the following expressions (26) to (28) can be obtained. If there exist a multiplying factor k satisfying the expressions (26) to (28), the multiplying factor k is the maximum multiplying factor in question, and can be expressed by the following expression (29).
[ Expression 6 ] k · S c 1 - f c 1 ( 1 ) = 1 ( 26 ) 0 { k · S c 2 - f c 2 ( 1 ) } 1 ( 27 ) 0 { k · S c 3 - f c 3 ( 1 ) } 1 ( 28 ) k = f c 1 ( 1 ) + 1 S c 1 ( 29 )
(3) A case where, in the relationship between a signal level Sw (described later) and signal levels of Wr, Wg, and Wb, a characteristic line of Wb corresponding to B is a curve which has a peak value as shown in FIG. 11, for example.
Firstly, a value of a W signal Sw indicating a peak value is expressed as Sw_p. In this case, there is a possibility that in the case where a pixel signal D4 b corresponding to B after a RGB/RGBW conversion is 1 and a W signal Sw (D4 w) is Sw_p, a value V of a video signal D3 before a RGB/RGBW conversion is higher than that in the case where a W signal Sw is 1. In this case, each of pixel signals D4 r and D4 g other than the pixel signal D4 b only needs to be a value within the range from 0 to 1, so that expressions (30) to (32) can be obtained. If there exists a multiplying factor k which satisfies these expressions (30) to (32), the multiplying factor k is the maximum multiplying factor in question, and can be expressed by the following expression (33).
[ Expression 7 ] k · S b - f b ( S w _ p ) = 1 ( 30 ) 0 { k · S r - f r ( S w _ p ) } 1 ( 31 ) 0 { k · S g - f g ( S w _ p ) } 1 ( 32 ) k = f b ( S w _ p ) + 1 S b ( 33 )
(4) A case where a value of the W signal Sw in question exists between the above described value Sw_p of the W signal Sw and 1.
In this case, if colors c1 to c3 are expressed as c, the following expression (34) is obtained with regard to the color c, and the expression (34) can be transformed into the following expressions (35) and (36).
[ Expression 8 ] 0 { k · S c - f c ( S w ) } 1 ( 34 ) f c ( S w ) S c k ( 35 ) k 1 + f c ( S w ) S c ( 36 )
Of the multiplying factors k which satisfy these expressions with respect to all three colors of c1 to c3, the factor k having the highest value is the multiplying factor k in question. In this case, if the function fc (Sw) with respect to B has peak value, the right-hand value in the expression (36) monotonically decreases in the range larger than the value Sw_p of the W signal Sw at peak value. In this case, the multiplying factor k should be lower than the right-hand value in the expression (36) with respect to all the colors of c1 to c3; therefore, in the range where the right-hand value in the expression (36) has larger value, a point where the multiplying factor k gives the maximum value is as follows. That is, the maximum value is given at the intersection between the right-hand value in the expression (36) with respect to B and the right-hand value in the expression (36) with respect to the other color. In other words, where c1 and c2 are either of R or G, the following expressions (37) to (39) are obtained. Of these expressions, if the expressions (37) and (38) are transformed, the following expression (40) can be obtained. To solve this expression (40), as in the case of the above described (1), firstly, function Hc1,b (Sw) specified by the following expression (41) is defined. Thereafter, with respect to all the combinations of the colors, inverse function H−1 c1,b(Sc1/S
b) of function Hc1,b(Sw) specified by the following expression (42) is obtained to prepare a Look-Up Table. If a value having the ratio of (Sc1/Sb) exists within an input range in a Look-Up Table corresponding to the inverse function H−1 c1,b(Sc1/Sb), the W signal Sw and the multiplying factor k can be evaluated with use of the following expression (43).
[ Expression 9 ] k · S b - f b ( S w ) = 1 ( 37 ) k · S c 1 - f c 1 ( S w ) = 1 ( S w _ p < S w < 1 ) ( 38 ) 0 { k · S c 2 - f c 2 ( S w ) } 1 ( 39 ) S c 1 S b = 1 + f c 1 ( S w ) 1 + f b ( S w ) ( 40 ) Hc 1 , b ( Sw ) = 1 + fc 1 ( Sw ) 1 + fb ( Sw ) ( 41 ) S w = H c 1 , b - 1 ( S c 1 S b ) ( 42 ) k = f b ( S w ) + 1 S b ( 43 )
Through consideration of all the cases in (1) to (4), the multiplying factor k can be evaluated, and the value V which is evaluated by multiplying the multiplying factor k by a video signal D3 before a RGB/RGBW conversion is the maximum value in that case.
[Function and Effect of Liquid Crystal Display Apparatus 1]
Now, functions and effects of the liquid crystal display apparatus 1 of the present embodiment will be described.
[1. Overview of Display Operation]
As shown in FIG. 1, in the liquid crystal display apparatus 1, firstly, the video signal processing section 41 carries out a predetermined image processing on the input video signal Din, thereby generating a video signal D1 (D1 r, D1 g, and D1 b). Subsequently, the output signal generation section 42 carries out a predetermined signal processing on the video signal D1. Thus, a lighting signal BL1 in the back light 3 and a video signal D4 (D4 r, D4 g, D4 b, and D4 z) in the liquid crystal display panel 2 are generated.
Then, the video signal D4 and the lighting signal BL1 thus generated are input to the timing control section 43. Of them, the video signal D4 is supplied from the timing control section 43 to the data driver 51. The data driver 51 converts the video signal D4 from digital to analog so as to generate a video voltage serving as analog signal. Then, by the drive voltage output from the gate driver 52 and the data driver 51 to the pixel 20 (each of the sub-pixels 20R, 20G, 20B, and 20W), the display drive operation is carried out. By this, the display drive based on the video signal D4 (D4 r, D4 g, D4 b, and D4 w) is carried out to the pixel 20 (each of the sub-pixels 20R, 20G, 20B, and 20W) in the liquid crystal display panel 2.
Specifically, as shown in FIG. 3, in response to a select signal supplied through the gate line G from the gate driver 52, an On/OFF operation for the TFT device 21 is carried out. In this way, the data line D, the liquid crystal device 22 and the subsidiary capacitive device 23 are selectively connected. As a result, a video voltage based on the video signal D4 supplied from the data driver 51 is supplied to the liquid crystal device 22, and a line-sequential display drive operation is carried out.
Meanwhile, the lighting signal BL1 is supplied from the timing control section 43 to the back light driving section 50. The back light driving section 50 carries out, based on the lighting signal BL1, a lighting drive (lighting drive) for each light source (each light emitting device) in the back light 3. Specifically, a lighting drive (active control of luminance (dynamic control)) is carried out according to a luminance level (signal level) of an input video signal Din.
In this case, in the pixel 20 (sub-pixels 20R, 20G, 20B, and 20W) which has been supplied with the video voltage, an illuminating light from the back light 3 is modulated in the liquid crystal display panel 2 and then output as display light. Thus, the video display based on input video signal Din is carried out in the liquid crystal display apparatus 1.
In this case, in the present embodiment, the video display is carried out with use of video signals corresponding to the sub-pixels 20R, 20G, 20B, and 20W of four colors. Therefore, in comparison with the known apparatus in which a video display is carried out with use of video signals corresponding to sub-pixels of three colors of R, G, and B, enhanced luminance efficiency can be achieved. In addition, since an active drive of the back light 3 is carried out with use of luminance according to the luminance level of the input video signal Din, lower power consumption and expansion of dynamic range can be realized while keeping a display luminance.
[2. Operation in Characteristic Part]
Next, as one of characteristic part of the present disclosure, an operation for generating an output signal (operation in the output signal generation section 42) in the case of using a sub-pixel structure of four colors of R, G, B, and W is specifically described in comparison with comparative example.
Comparative Example
In a general liquid crystal display apparatus, incident light on a liquid crystal layer from a back light is modulated according to a signal level of a video signal, and amount of light (luminance) of transmitted light (display light) is controlled. Spectroscopic characteristic of transmitted light from the liquid crystal layer indicates gradation dependency, and as the signal level of the video signal lowers, a transmittance peak shifts to the short wavelength side (blue color light side) (see FIG. 7, for example). In this connection, in an liquid crystal display apparatus using sub-pixel structure of four colors of R, G, B, and Z (W), a sub-pixel of Z (W) shows a high luminance characteristic, so that spectroscopic characteristic of the transmitted light from the sub-pixel of Z (W) changes according to a signal level of a video signal. This means that a chromaticity point of transmitted light (display light) from whole pixel is also largely shifted depending on a signal level of a video signal. In particular, as in the present embodiment, if a sub-pixel of W (sub-pixel 20W) is adopted as a sub-pixel of Z, since no color filter is disposed in the sub-pixel of W, variation in chromaticity point of a display light which occurs according to the signal level, as described above, is large.
For example, if cell thickness or drive voltage in a sub-pixel of W is set (see FIG. 8, for example) so that transmittance in sub-pixel of W indicates relatively high liquid crystal spectroscopic characteristic, in other words, that transmittance peak is located near the wavelength region of G, the result is as follows. That is, as shown in FIG. 7 for example, in a signal level lower than the maximum signal level in the sub-pixel of W, a transmittance peak is located in a wavelength region of B. It is to be noted that, FIG. 8 illustrates spectroscopic transmittance in each of sub-pixels R, G, B, and W.
If color reproduction characteristic in a sub-pixel structure of four colors of R, G, B, and W is illustrated in HSV color space, if it is assumed that there is no variation in transmittance peak in sub-pixel of W, the result is ideally as shown in FIG. 9, for example. In other words, shown in FIG. 9 is a rotationally symmetric color space with the white-color chromaticity point as the center. However, practically, variation in transmittance peak in a sub-pixel of W depending on a signal level occurs as mentioned before, and therefore color reproduction characteristic in the sub-pixel structure of four colors of R, G, B, and W according to comparative example (known) will be as shown in FIG. 10, for example. In other words, a bright (value of value V is high) region exists in colors (color phase) from white (W) to blue (B) side, while dark (value of value V is low) region exists in color region (color phase) from magenta (M) to cyan (C) with yellow (Y) at the center thereof. Incidentally, the higher the value of value V at this time, the more reduction in power consumption can be realized.
As described, in the liquid crystal display apparatus using a sub-pixel structure of four colors of R, G, B, and Z according to the comparative example, due to a variation in spectroscopic characteristic of transmitted light from sub-pixel of Z, variation (color shift) in chromaticity point of the display light is caused according to a signal level of a video signal, thereby lowering image quality. In addition, in the case where an active control of back light luminance is simultaneously used, advantages such as lower power consumption and expansion of dynamic range may not be sufficiently achieved.
FIG. 11 illustrates an exemplary relationship between a signal level of a W-sub-pixel video signal (signal level of W signal) and, above described Wr, Wg, and Wb (signal level of each of R-, G-, and B-sub-pixel intermediate video signals in the case where a signal level of W signal is replaced by a set of the R-, G-, and B-sub pixel intermediate video signals) in the sub-pixel structure of four colors of R, G, B, and W according to the comparative example. If it is assumed that there is no variation in transmittance peak in the sub-pixel of W as in the case shown in FIG. 9, for example, the relationship between the signal level of W signal and Wr, Wg, and Wb will be proportional (will show linearity). In the comparative example, as described above, variation in transmittance peak in a sub-pixel of W is caused according to a signal level, each of Wr, Wg, and Wb is a function having a gradient depending on a signal level of W signal (shows nonlinearity).
If an active control (dimming processing) of back light luminance is carried out in the case where such a nonlinearity is shown, a signal level of the video signal is also nonlinearly changed to cause a variation (color shift) in chromaticity point in some cases, thereby lowering image quality. Further, in order to reduce such a lowering of image quality due to the color shift, a complicated arithmetic processing for the nonlinearity becomes necessary during a signal processing (dimming processing), which results in a complicated device configuration. Specifically, as opposed to the present embodiment described below, for example, in the case where generation of a lighting signal and a dimming processing are carried out after video signals of R, G, B, and W are generated by an RGB/RGBW conversion processing, it is difficult to realize, in a simple configuration, both the dimming processing and the prevention of lowering of image quality caused by the color shift.
Embodiment
In the embodiment, signal processing are carried out in the output signal generation section 42 as follows. Specifically, firstly, the BL level calculation section 421 generates a lighting signal BL1 based on a video signal D1, and then, the LCD level calculation section 422 carries out a predetermined dimming processing (division operation) based on the video signal D1 and the lighting signal BL1 to generate a video signal D2. The RGB/RGBW conversion section 424 carries out a RGB/RGBW conversion processing on a video signal D3 based on the resultant video signal D2 from the dimming processing to generate a video signal D4. In other words, the generation and dimming processing of the lighting signal BL1 are carried out on the video signal D1 (D1 r, D1 g, and D1 b) corresponding to the three colors of R, G, and B, and thereafter, the RGB/RGBW conversion processing is carried out to generate the video signal D4 corresponding to four colors of R, G, B, and W.
By this procedure, as described above, as opposed to the case where the generation and dimming processing of the lighting signal are carried out after video signals of R, G, B, and W are generated by the RGB/RGBW conversion processing, the result is as follows. That is, the color shift of the display light due to variation of peak wavelength region (above-described nonlinearity) in emitted light (transmitted light) from the sub-pixel 20W is suppressed with a simple arithmetic processing (dimming processing).
In addition, in the embodiment, the chromaticity point adjustment section 423 in the output signal generation section 42 carries out a predetermined chromaticity point adjustment on the video signal D2 (D2 r, D2 g, and D2 b) to generate a video signal D3 (D3 r, D3 g, and D3 b). More specifically, when the video signal D2 (D1) is a video signal which indicates W, the chromaticity point adjustment is carried out so that the chromaticity point of display light emitted from the liquid crystal display panel 2 based on the emitted light from the back light 3 is a white-color chromaticity point. Subsequently, the RGB/RGBW conversion section 424 carries out the RGB/RGBW conversion processing for the video signal D3 (D3 r, D3 g, and D3 b) after the chromaticity point adjustment in order to generate the video signal D4 (D4 r, D4 g, D4 b, and D4 w) which corresponds to four colors of R, G, B, and W.
In this case, the chromaticity point adjustment section 423 carries out the chromaticity point adjustment, by using, for example, the transformation matrix Md2d3 specified by the expression (4). In other words, the video signal D2 (pixel signals D2 r, D2 g, and D2 b) is multiplied by the transformation matrix Md2d3 (or, matrix operation is carried out), thereby to generate the video signal D3 (pixel signals D3 r, D3 g, and D3 b).
By this, when the video signal D2 is a video signal which indicates W, the chromaticity point of the display light indicates a white-color chromaticity point. In other words, the chromaticity point of the peak wavelength region in emitted light from the sub-pixel 20W is adjusted, and the color shift of the display light is suppressed.
Further, in the embodiment, upon the RGB/RGBW conversion processing, the LUTs 66R, 66G, and 66B provided in advance according to, for example, the nonlinearity shown in FIG. 11 (nonlinearity in the relationship between a signal level of Sw and signal levels of Wr, Wg, and Wb) are used. Thus, fine adjustment of the RGB/RGBW conversion processing according to a characteristic (e.g., the above described nonlinearity) of the liquid crystal display apparatus 1 (liquid crystal display panel 2) becomes possible.
As described, in the embodiment, in the output signal generation section 42, the lighting signal BL1 is generated based on the video signal D1 corresponding to three colors of R, G, and B and the predetermined dimming processing based on the video signal D1 and the lighting signal BL1 is carried out, and thereafter, the predetermined RGB/RGBW conversion processing based on the video signal D2 after the dimming processing is carried out, thereby to generate the video signal D4 corresponding to four colors of R, G, B, and W. Consequently, it is possible to reduce the color shift of the display light caused by the nonlinearity with a simple arithmetic processing (dimming processing). Therefore, in the case where a video display is carried out using the sub-pixel structure of four colors of R, G, B, and W, the dimming processing can be realized in a simple configuration with the lowering of image quality due to color shift being suppressed.
In addition, since the pixel 20 of the embodiment is configured to include the sub-pixel 20W corresponding to W as an example of a sub-pixel 20Z which will be described later, it is not necessary to provide any color filter in this sub-pixel 20W, and therefore enhanced efficiency in luminance (lower power consumption) can be realized in particular.
MODIFICATION
Next, modifications (modifications 1 to 3) of the embodiment will be described. It is to be noted that the same components as those of the embodiment will be represented by the same symbols and the descriptions thereof are omitted as appropriate.
Modification 1
In a liquid crystal display apparatus according to a modification 1, the BL level calculation section 421 in the liquid crystal display apparatus 1 of the embodiment uses a common LUT shared by R, G, and B hereinafter described (common LUT 70 described later). Specifically, when generating a lighting signal BL1, as opposed to the embodiment, the BL level calculation section 421 uses a LUT (second Look-Up Table) in which a relationship between chromaticity of the video signal D1 and the highest signal level which can be expressed in the chromaticity or the inverse of the signal level is specified in advance.
The reason for this is as follows. That is, although the highest signal level (signal amplitude) which can be expressed can be obtained by using the circuit configuration as in the embodiment, the configuration (circuit configuration) may be complicated. In view of this, in the modification 1, the highest signal level which can be expressed for chromaticity of the video signal D1 is calculated in advance, and the resulting level is retained as a LUT for the video signal D1. In this manner, through comparison with the signal level of the video signal D1, the lighting signal BL1 can be calculated. Methods for preliminarily calculating the highest signal level which can be expressed for the chromaticity of the video signal D1 are described below.
Firstly, as the first method, the highest signal level which can be expressed may be obtained with use of the methods for obtaining solutions in each of the cases (1) to (4) explained in the above described embodiment.
Next, as the second method, a video signal D1 before an RGB/RGBW conversion may be obtained through a back calculation of a video signal D4 after the RGB/RGBW conversion. In the signal which becomes the highest value after the RGB/RGBW conversion, a pixel signal corresponding to either of colors of R, G, or B is 1 as the upper limit. For this reason, a reverse conversion (RGBW/RGB conversion) of a video signal in which a pixel signal corresponding to either of colors is made to be 1 and at the same time the other pixel signals corresponding to the other colors are minutely changed is carried out to thereby generate a video signal D3, and through inverse matrix calculation, or the like, of the video signal D3, the video signal D1 is obtained. The video signal D1 obtained in this way is divided by chromaticity, and the signal having amplitude of the largest value V in the chromaticity is obtained as the highest signal.
As the third method, a repeated computation may be adopted and the computation method is as follows. Firstly, an arbitrary video signal D1 is multiplied by constant until its signal level (amplitude) is, for example, almost 2, and then, a matrix conversion, and an RGB/RGBW conversion which gives the minimum amplitude are carried out. At this point of time, a W signal Sw is converted up to 1 as the upper limit of LUT while pixel signals corresponding to R, G, and B exceed 1. Here, in the pixel signals corresponding to these R, G, and B, a difference value between upper limit and 1 is denoted by d whereas the signal level (amplitude) of the video signal D1 is denoted by h. Subsequently, assuming that the next input signal is a signal wherein the video signal D1 is multiplied by (h−d)/h, again the matrix operation and the RGB/RGBW conversion are carried out to evaluate the difference value d between the upper limit and 1. This computation is repeatedly carried out until the difference value d becomes below a predetermined threshold level (minute value), and amplitude of value V of the input signal at that time is used as the highest expressible signal level.
Meanwhile, there may be various methods for using the highest expressible signal value obtained in this way as LUT.
For example, a LUT of HSV type, as the common LUT 70 shown in FIGS. 12A and 12B, can be given as an example. The common LUT 70 is a LUT in which hue H and saturation S in chromaticity of the video signal D1 are obtained, and the highest expressible signal level for those is used as value V. In the modification 1, the lighting signal BL1 can be obtained with use of the highest value (the highest value in all pixels 20) of the ratio which can be obtained by dividing the video signal D1 by the highest expressible signal level (value V) which is obtained from the common LUT 70.
Depending on chromaticity of the video signal D1, there is a portion (region) where the maximum value of the value V is steeply changed in the common LUT 70, as shown by the symbol P11 in FIG. 12A, for example. In the region where the maximum value of the value V is steeply changed, the display luminance can also be rapidly changed for the reason described below.
That is, generally, when rapidly changed, luminance of the back light causes bouncing (color skipping) and other problems, so that luminance of the back light is changed with a certain amount of time constant. For example, in the case where gradation of color is scrolled, when a portion where the maximum value of value V is steeply dropped reaches a boundary portion of the back light, the BL level calculation section 421 will tend to rapidly increase luminance of the back light. However, as described earlier, luminance of the back light changes only in a certain amount of time constraint, so that the luminance and chromaticity of the region will not be correctly expressed, thereby generating “dark” portion.
Therefore, in the common LUT 70 of the present modification, as shown by the symbol P12 in FIG. 12B, for example, it is preferred that the signal level variation in the lighting signal BL1 in response to chromaticity variation in the video signal D1 be limited to equal to or lower than a predetermined threshold level. As a reference for this predetermined threshold level, a value of sensitivity of the human eye (for example, ΔE<1.0) can be given. It is to be noted that, ΔE is color difference between two colors which is defined in CIE1976 L*u*v* color system and CIE1976 L*a*b* color system, and values around ΔE≈1 are the allowable tolerance of color difference.
In the case where the common LUT 70 is set in this manner, it is possible to reduce the rapid change in luminance, bouncing (color skipping), and the like which are caused by a steep change in luminance of the back light due to a shape of a color space.
Modification 2
A liquid crystal display apparatus according to a modification 2 includes a BL calculation section 421A described below disposed in place of the BL level calculation section 421 in the liquid crystal display apparatus 1 of the above mentioned embodiment. As opposed to the BL level calculation section 421 described in the modification 1, the BL level calculation section 421A uses individual LUTs ( LUTs 74R, 74G, and 74B described later) for each of pixel signals corresponding to R, G, and B.
The reason for this is as follows. That is, although all the video signals described above are linear signals, input signals (video signal D1) are typically signals which have been converted by gamma conversion (γ conversion). Therefore, if gamma data can be processed as it is, simple configuration can be realized. In view of this, the BL level calculation section 421A of the modification 2 includes three kinds of LUTs each of which is used when each of pixel signals of R, G, and B is at the maximum value. In addition, as gamma data, the input signal is divided by the maximum value of R, G, and B, and chromaticity is specified by values other than the maximum value.
FIG. 13 illustrates an exemplary block configuration of the BL level calculation section 421A. The BL level calculation section 421A includes a Max selection section 71, a division section 72, a selection output section 73, and LUTs 74R, 74G, and 74B for each color of R, G, and B.
The Max selection section 71 selects a pixel signal which has the highest signal level from pixel signals D1 r, D1 g, and D1 b in a video signal D1, and outputs the selected signal.
The division section 72 is a section in which each of pixel signals D1 r, D1 g, and D1 b in a video signal D1 is divided by the highest signal level output from the Max selection section 71.
The selection output section 73 selects a part of the divided values of the pixel signals D1 r, D1 g, and D1 b output from the division section 72, and outputs the selected part to each of LUTs 74R, 74G, and 74B. Specifically, the selection output section 73 outputs the divided values of the pixel signals D1 g and D1 b individually to the LUT 74R, outputs the divided values of the pixel signals D1 r and D1 b individually to the LUT 74G, and outputs the divided values of the pixel signals D1 r and D1 g individually to the LUT 74B.
As shown in FIGS. 14 to 16, for example, the LUTs 74R, 74G, and 74B are LUTs in which hue H and saturation S in chromaticity of the video signal D1, and inverse of the corresponding highest expressible signal level (1/value V) are related. This is because, as mentioned above, the ratio obtained by dividing a pixel signal by the signal level having the highest expressible value is used when calculating back light luminance, so that the use of the inverse of value V leads to a simple configuration.
Here, also in the modification 2 as in the modification 1, it is preferred that, in the LUTs 74R, 74G, and 74B, signal level variation of the lighting signal BL1 responding to chromaticity variation in the video signal D1 be limited to equal to or lower than a predetermined threshold level.
Specifically, in a portion (region) where (1/V) is steeply changed as shown by symbol P21 in FIG. 17A, for example, it is preferred that the signal level variation be limited (softened) to equal to or lower than the threshold level as shown by symbol P22 in FIG. 17B, for example. Likewise, portions (regions) shown, for example, by symbols P31 in FIG. 18A and P41 in FIG. 19A are preferably limited in the signal level variation as shown, for example, by symbols P32 in FIG. 18B and P42 in FIG. 19B.
Modification 3
A liquid crystal display apparatus according to a modification 3 includes a liquid crystal display panel having a pixel 20-1 described below in place of the liquid crystal display panel 2 having the pixel 20 in the liquid crystal display apparatus 1 of the embodiment.
FIGS. 20A and 20B are schematic plan views illustrating exemplary configurations of sub-pixels of each pixel 20-1 according to the modification 3. FIGS. 20A and 20B correspond to FIGS. 2A and 2B, respectively.
Each pixel 20-1 includes the same sub-pixels 20R, 20G, and 20B corresponding to three colors of R, G, and B as in the embodiment, and a sub-pixel 20 Z which shows luminance higher than those of the three colors. The color (Z) which shows the high luminance includes yellow (Y), white (W), and the like, and, in the modification 3, the color (Z) is described as a broader concept of these exemplified colors.
Of these sub-pixels 20R, 20G, 20B, and 20Z of four colors of R, G, B, and Z, the sub-pixels 20R, 20G, and 20B corresponding to three colors of R, G, and B are provided with, as in the embodiment, the color filters 24R, 24G, and 24B corresponding to each color of R, G, and B, respectively. On the other hands, the sub-pixel 20Z of Z is provided with a color filter (color filter 24Z shown in the figure) corresponding to Y in the case of Z=Y, for example. It is to be noted that, as described in the embodiment, no color filter is provided in the sub-pixel 20Z (sub-pixel 20W) in the case of Z=W. In addition, also in the pixel 20-1 of the present modification 3, the layout of each of the sub-pixels 20R, 20G, 20B, and 20Z is not limited to these examples, and other layouts may be adopted.
Also in the liquid crystal display apparatus in the modification 3 configured in this manner, it is possible to obtain the same effects as in the liquid crystal display apparatus 1 of the embodiment, through the same functions. More specifically, in the case where a video display is performed with use of the sub-pixel structure of four colors of R, G, B, and Z, it is possible to realize in a simple configuration a dimming processing while suppressing lowering of image quality due to color shift.
Other Modifications
Hereinbefore, the present disclosure has been described with the embodiment and the modifications, but the present disclosure is not limited to them, and various modifications may be made.
For example, in the embodiment and so forth, description has been made regarding the case where active control of the back light is carried out with entire screen targeted as a unit. However, for example, it is possible to adopt a configuration in which a screen is partitioned into a plurality of sub-regions and active control of the back light is individually carried out for each sub-region.
Further, the configurations of blocks and the computing methods described in the embodiment and so forth are not limited thereto, and other configurations and methods may be adopted.
Still further, in the embodiment and so forth, description has been made regarding the case where a sub-pixel structure of four colors of R, G, B, and Z is adopted. In addition thereto, the present disclosure may be applied to a sub-pixel structure of five colors or more colors which includes a sub-pixel (s) corresponding to other color (s).
In addition, the series of processing described in the embodiment and so forth may be carried out by hardware or software. When the series of processing are carried out by software, the program configuring the software is installed to the general-purpose computer or the like. The program may be stored in advance in the recording medium incorporated in the computer.
The present disclosure contains subject matter related to that disclosed in Japanese Priority Patent Application JP 2010-168579 filed in the Japan Patent Office on Jul. 27, 2010, the entire content of which is hereby incorporated by reference.
It should be understood by those skilled in the art that various modifications, combinations, sub-combinations and alterations may occur depending on design requirements and other factors insofar as they are within the scope of the appended claims or the equivalents thereof.

Claims (18)

What is claimed is:
1. A liquid crystal display apparatus, comprising:
a light source;
a liquid crystal display panel including a plurality of pixels, each pixel of the plurality of pixels having sub-pixels of three colors including red (R), green (G), and blue (B), and a sub-pixel of a color (Z) with a luminance higher than those of the three colors; and
a display control circuit including an output signal generation circuit, a backlight driving circuit and a data driver for the liquid crystal display panel, wherein
the output signal generation circuit includes a backlight level calculation circuit, a level calculation circuit and a predetermined color conversion circuit,
the backlight level calculation circuit receives an input video signal that includes only colors R, G and B, and generates a lighting signal by processing the input video signal,
the level calculation circuit receives the input video signal and the lighting signal and generates a resultant video signal that includes only colors R, G and B, by performing a dimming processing on the input video signal according to the lighting signal, and
the predetermined color conversion circuit generates an output video signal that includes colors R, G, B and Z, by processing the resultant video signal, the processing including performing predetermined chromaticity point adjustment on the resultant video signal to allow a chromaticity point of display light emitted from the liquid crystal display panel to come to a white color chromaticity point, and performing a color conversion processing on the resultant video signal after the chromaticity point adjustment.
2. The liquid crystal display apparatus according to claim 1, wherein the predetermined color conversion circuit uses a look-up table (LUT) when generating the output video signal, the LUT provided in advance according to nonlinearity in a relationship between a signal level of a Z-sub-pixel video signal of the output video signal and a signal level of each of R-, G-, and B-sub-pixel intermediate video signals which are specified when an assumption is made that the signal level of the Z-sub-pixel video signal is replaced by a set of the R-, G-, and B-sub-pixel intermediate video signals.
3. The liquid crystal display apparatus according to claim 1, wherein the output signal generation circuit performs the color conversion processing to allow the signal levels of sub-pixel video signals configuring the output video signal to be substantially equal to one another.
4. The liquid crystal display apparatus according to claim 1, wherein the output signal generation circuit limits, in a color conversion processing, signal levels of sub-pixel video signals configuring the output video signal to be equal to or less than a predetermined upper limit.
5. The liquid crystal display apparatus according to claim 1, wherein the output signal generation circuit generates the lighting signal with use of a look-up table (LUT) which specifies, in advance, a relationship between a chromaticity represented by the input video signal and a highest signal level expressible for a corresponding chromaticity or the inverse of the highest signal level.
6. The liquid crystal display apparatus according to claim 5, wherein the LUT limits signal level variation in the lighting signal which is specified by a chromaticity variation in the input video signal to be equal to or lower than a predetermined threshold level.
7. The liquid crystal display apparatus according to claim 1, wherein each of the pixels includes a sub-pixel of white (W) as the sub-pixel of Z.
8. The liquid crystal display apparatus according to claim 7, wherein the sub-pixels of the three colors are provided with color filters corresponding to respective colors of R, G, and B, and the sub-pixel of W is provided without a color filter.
9. The liquid crystal display apparatus according to claim 1, wherein
the predetermined color conversion circuit further includes a chromaticity point adjustment circuit and a color conversion circuit,
the chromaticity point adjustment circuit adjusts the chromaticity of the resultant video signal, and
the color conversion circuit generates the output video signal by performing the color conversion processing on the resultant video signal.
10. The liquid crystal display apparatus according to claim 1, wherein
the display control circuit further includes a timing control circuit,
the backlight level calculation circuit outputs the lighting signal to the timing control circuit, and
the predetermined color conversion circuit outputs the output video signal to the timing control circuit.
11. The liquid crystal display apparatus according to claim 10, wherein
the timing control circuit supplies a driving signal based on the lighting signal and the output signal to the data driver.
12. The liquid crystal display apparatus according to claim 1, wherein the backlight level calculation circuit generates the lighting signal by processing only the input signal.
13. A video signal generating apparatus, comprising:
a backlight level calculation circuit that receives an input video signal and generates a lighting signal by processing the input video signal;
a level calculation circuit that receives the input video signal and the lighting signal and generates a resultant video signal by performing a dimming processing on the input video signal according to the lighting signal; and
a predetermined color conversion circuit that generates an output video signal by processing the resultant video signal, the processing including performing a predetermined chromaticity point adjustment on the resultant video signal to allow a chromaticity point of display light emitted from the liquid crystal display panel to come to a white color chromaticity point, and performing a color conversion processing on the resultant video signal after the chromaticity point adjustment, wherein
the input video signal and the resultant video signal include only colors red (R), green (G), and blue (B), and
the output video signal includes colors R, G, B and a fourth color (Z).
14. The video signal generating apparatus according to claim 13, wherein the predetermined color conversion circuit uses a look-up table (LUT) when generating the output video signal, the LUT provided in advance according to nonlinearity in a relationship between a signal level of a Z-sub-pixel video signal of the output video signal and a signal level of each of R-, G-, and B-sub-pixel intermediate video signals which are specified when an assumption is made that the signal level of the Z-sub-pixel video signal is replaced by a set of the R-, G-, and B-sub-pixel intermediate video signals.
15. The video signal generating apparatus according to claim 13, wherein the predetermined color conversion circuit performs the color conversion processing to allow the signal levels of sub-pixel video signals configuring the output video signal to be substantially equal to one another.
16. The video signal generating apparatus according to claim 13, wherein the backlight level calculation circuit generates the lighting signal by processing only the input signal.
17. The video signal generating apparatus according to claim 13, wherein
the predetermined color conversion circuit further includes a chromaticity point adjustment circuit and a color conversion circuit,
the chromaticity point adjustment circuit adjusts the chromaticity of the resultant video signal, and
the color conversion circuit generates the output video signal by performing the color conversion processing on the resultant video signal.
18. The video signal generating apparatus according to claim 13, further comprising a timing control circuit, wherein
the backlight level calculation circuit outputs the lighting signal to the timing control circuit,
the predetermined color conversion circuit outputs the output video signal to the timing control circuit, and
the timing control circuit generates a driving signal based on the lighting signal and the output signal.
US13/181,765 2010-07-27 2011-07-13 Liquid crystal display apparatus for generating an output video signal based on an input video signal and a lighting signal Active 2032-12-18 US9270958B2 (en)

Applications Claiming Priority (2)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
JP2010168579A JP5593921B2 (en) 2010-07-27 2010-07-27 Liquid crystal display
JP2010-168579 2010-07-27

Publications (2)

Publication Number Publication Date
US20120026211A1 US20120026211A1 (en) 2012-02-02
US9270958B2 true US9270958B2 (en) 2016-02-23

Family

ID=45526278

Family Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
US13/181,765 Active 2032-12-18 US9270958B2 (en) 2010-07-27 2011-07-13 Liquid crystal display apparatus for generating an output video signal based on an input video signal and a lighting signal

Country Status (3)

Country Link
US (1) US9270958B2 (en)
JP (1) JP5593921B2 (en)
CN (1) CN102347010B (en)

Cited By (1)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US11404016B2 (en) 2016-08-26 2022-08-02 Semiconductor Energy Laboratory Co., Ltd. Display device and electronic device having neural network for calculating set values of luminance and color tone

Families Citing this family (12)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
JP2013195869A (en) 2012-03-22 2013-09-30 Japan Display West Co Ltd Liquid crystal display apparatus, method of driving liquid crystal display apparatus, and electronic apparatus
JP5924147B2 (en) * 2012-06-14 2016-05-25 ソニー株式会社 Display device, image processing device, and display method
JP6035940B2 (en) * 2012-07-23 2016-11-30 セイコーエプソン株式会社 Image processing apparatus, display apparatus, and image processing method
JP2014155024A (en) * 2013-02-07 2014-08-25 Japan Display Inc Color conversion device, display device, electronic apparatus, and color conversion method
JP5909206B2 (en) * 2013-03-25 2016-04-26 株式会社ジャパンディスプレイ Display device and electronic device
JP6350980B2 (en) * 2013-10-09 2018-07-04 Tianma Japan株式会社 Control circuit and display device including the control circuit
KR20160092125A (en) 2015-01-26 2016-08-04 삼성디스플레이 주식회사 Display apparatus
KR101884233B1 (en) 2016-08-26 2018-08-01 삼성전자주식회사 Display apparatus and driving method thereof
CN106707627A (en) * 2017-03-27 2017-05-24 京东方科技集团股份有限公司 Array substrate, display panel and display device
CN110223622A (en) * 2019-06-11 2019-09-10 惠科股份有限公司 Control circuit and compensation method for data display
KR20230069535A (en) 2021-11-12 2023-05-19 엘지디스플레이 주식회사 Large-area display device and large-area display device driving system
CN114550671B (en) * 2022-03-09 2022-11-22 深圳市科金明电子股份有限公司 LCD driving method, device and controller based on output image format configuration

Citations (17)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US4600274A (en) 1982-10-01 1986-07-15 Seiko Epson Corporation Liquid crystal display device having color filter triads
JPH0454207A (en) 1990-06-20 1992-02-21 Fuji Heavy Ind Ltd Muffler
JPH04355722A (en) 1991-06-03 1992-12-09 Canon Inc Color liquid crystal display element
US20020130830A1 (en) * 2001-03-15 2002-09-19 Park Cheol-Woo LCD with adaptive luminance intensifying function and driving method thereof
JP2007003848A (en) 2005-06-24 2007-01-11 Hitachi Ltd Signal conversion method and signal converter
US20070279372A1 (en) 2006-06-02 2007-12-06 Clairvoyante, Inc Multiprimary color display with dynamic gamut mapping
US20080180384A1 (en) 2006-11-06 2008-07-31 Sharp Kabushiki Kaisha Transmission liquid crystal display device
US20080284719A1 (en) * 2007-05-18 2008-11-20 Semiconductor Energy Laboratory Co., Ltd. Liquid Crystal Display Device and Driving Method Thereof
WO2009003041A2 (en) 2007-06-26 2008-12-31 Apple Inc. Techniques for adaptive backlight dimming with concurrent video data adjustments
US20090085926A1 (en) * 2007-10-01 2009-04-02 Samsung Electronics Co. Ltd. System and method for converting rgb to rgbw color using white value extraction
US20090085847A1 (en) * 2007-09-27 2009-04-02 Takashi Morisue Transmissive liquid crystal display device
JP2009192887A (en) 2008-02-15 2009-08-27 Hitachi Displays Ltd Display device
WO2009110129A1 (en) 2008-03-03 2009-09-11 シャープ株式会社 Liquid crystal display device
US20090273614A1 (en) * 2008-04-15 2009-11-05 Michael Francis Higgins Gamut mapping and subpixel rendering systems and methods
JP2009294323A (en) 2008-06-03 2009-12-17 Rohm Co Ltd Control circuit of liquid crystal display device and liquid crystal display system
US20100073338A1 (en) * 2008-09-24 2010-03-25 Miller Michael E Increasing dynamic range of display output
US20100156884A1 (en) * 2008-12-24 2010-06-24 Lg Display Co., Ltd. Liquid crystal display

Family Cites Families (1)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
JP2007086390A (en) * 2005-09-22 2007-04-05 Sharp Corp Led back light device and liquid crystal device

Patent Citations (18)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US4600274A (en) 1982-10-01 1986-07-15 Seiko Epson Corporation Liquid crystal display device having color filter triads
JPH0454207A (en) 1990-06-20 1992-02-21 Fuji Heavy Ind Ltd Muffler
JPH04355722A (en) 1991-06-03 1992-12-09 Canon Inc Color liquid crystal display element
US20020130830A1 (en) * 2001-03-15 2002-09-19 Park Cheol-Woo LCD with adaptive luminance intensifying function and driving method thereof
JP2007003848A (en) 2005-06-24 2007-01-11 Hitachi Ltd Signal conversion method and signal converter
US20070279372A1 (en) 2006-06-02 2007-12-06 Clairvoyante, Inc Multiprimary color display with dynamic gamut mapping
JP4354491B2 (en) 2006-11-06 2009-10-28 シャープ株式会社 Transmission type liquid crystal display device
US20080180384A1 (en) 2006-11-06 2008-07-31 Sharp Kabushiki Kaisha Transmission liquid crystal display device
US20080284719A1 (en) * 2007-05-18 2008-11-20 Semiconductor Energy Laboratory Co., Ltd. Liquid Crystal Display Device and Driving Method Thereof
WO2009003041A2 (en) 2007-06-26 2008-12-31 Apple Inc. Techniques for adaptive backlight dimming with concurrent video data adjustments
US20090085847A1 (en) * 2007-09-27 2009-04-02 Takashi Morisue Transmissive liquid crystal display device
US20090085926A1 (en) * 2007-10-01 2009-04-02 Samsung Electronics Co. Ltd. System and method for converting rgb to rgbw color using white value extraction
JP2009192887A (en) 2008-02-15 2009-08-27 Hitachi Displays Ltd Display device
WO2009110129A1 (en) 2008-03-03 2009-09-11 シャープ株式会社 Liquid crystal display device
US20090273614A1 (en) * 2008-04-15 2009-11-05 Michael Francis Higgins Gamut mapping and subpixel rendering systems and methods
JP2009294323A (en) 2008-06-03 2009-12-17 Rohm Co Ltd Control circuit of liquid crystal display device and liquid crystal display system
US20100073338A1 (en) * 2008-09-24 2010-03-25 Miller Michael E Increasing dynamic range of display output
US20100156884A1 (en) * 2008-12-24 2010-06-24 Lg Display Co., Ltd. Liquid crystal display

Non-Patent Citations (5)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Title
Chinese Patent Office Action issued Sep. 28, 2014 in corresponding Chinese Patent Application No. 201110211025.2 (with English Translation, (21 pages).
Office Action issued Feb. 18, 2014 in Japanese Application No. 2010-168579 (With English Translation).
Office Action issued May 13, 2014 in Japanese Patent Application No. 2010-168579 (with English language translation).
U.S. Appl. No. 13/095,104, filed Apr. 27, 2011, Asano, et al.
U.S. Appl. No. 13/156,835, filed Jun. 9, 2011, Yano, et al.

Cited By (1)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US11404016B2 (en) 2016-08-26 2022-08-02 Semiconductor Energy Laboratory Co., Ltd. Display device and electronic device having neural network for calculating set values of luminance and color tone

Also Published As

Publication number Publication date
US20120026211A1 (en) 2012-02-02
CN102347010A (en) 2012-02-08
CN102347010B (en) 2016-03-16
JP5593921B2 (en) 2014-09-24
JP2012027405A (en) 2012-02-09

Similar Documents

Publication Publication Date Title
US9270958B2 (en) Liquid crystal display apparatus for generating an output video signal based on an input video signal and a lighting signal
US8681190B2 (en) Liquid crystal display
EP2503537B1 (en) Liquid crystal display device and control method therefor
US8531368B2 (en) Transmissive liquid crystal display device having color saturation conversion section
US7786973B2 (en) Display device and method
US8390656B2 (en) Image display device and image display method
US9501983B2 (en) Color conversion device, display device, and color conversion method
JP5124051B1 (en) Display device
US9578296B2 (en) Signal conversion apparatus and method, and program and recording medium
JP4956686B2 (en) Display device
US9318075B2 (en) Image driving using color-compensated image data that has been color-scheme converted
US8330689B2 (en) Transmissive liquid crystal display device having control section for controlling emission luminance of backlight
US20110169873A1 (en) Liquid crystal display
US9401115B2 (en) Liquid crystal display with a higher luminance sub-pixel including controllable light emission subsections
US9257095B2 (en) Display device with a backlight
KR20160058362A (en) Data clipping method and device, and display device using the same
US9311886B2 (en) Display device including signal processing unit that converts an input signal for an input HSV color space, electronic apparatus including the display device, and drive method for the display device
JP2009210924A (en) Transmissive liquid crystal display
JP2010156817A (en) Transmission type liquid crystal display device
WO2017051768A1 (en) Display device and colour space expansion method
JP2009192636A (en) Transmissive-type liquid crystal display device

Legal Events

Date Code Title Description
AS Assignment

Owner name: SONY CORPORATION, JAPAN

Free format text: ASSIGNMENT OF ASSIGNORS INTEREST;ASSIGNORS:KIKUCHI, KEN;YANO, TOMOYA;SIGNING DATES FROM 20110629 TO 20110707;REEL/FRAME:026585/0319

STCF Information on status: patent grant

Free format text: PATENTED CASE

MAFP Maintenance fee payment

Free format text: PAYMENT OF MAINTENANCE FEE, 4TH YEAR, LARGE ENTITY (ORIGINAL EVENT CODE: M1551); ENTITY STATUS OF PATENT OWNER: LARGE ENTITY

Year of fee payment: 4

MAFP Maintenance fee payment

Free format text: PAYMENT OF MAINTENANCE FEE, 8TH YEAR, LARGE ENTITY (ORIGINAL EVENT CODE: M1552); ENTITY STATUS OF PATENT OWNER: LARGE ENTITY

Year of fee payment: 8