WO2022231629A1 - Réglage de daltonisme - Google Patents

Réglage de daltonisme Download PDF

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Publication number
WO2022231629A1
WO2022231629A1 PCT/US2021/030328 US2021030328W WO2022231629A1 WO 2022231629 A1 WO2022231629 A1 WO 2022231629A1 US 2021030328 W US2021030328 W US 2021030328W WO 2022231629 A1 WO2022231629 A1 WO 2022231629A1
Authority
WO
WIPO (PCT)
Prior art keywords
color
blindness
configuration
display
accessory
Prior art date
Application number
PCT/US2021/030328
Other languages
English (en)
Inventor
Alexander Morgan WILLIAMS
Timothy GUYNES
Gregory STATEN
Min-Yuan Hsieh
Yu Bin Chang
Original Assignee
Hewlett-Packard Development Company, L.P.
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 Hewlett-Packard Development Company, L.P. filed Critical Hewlett-Packard Development Company, L.P.
Priority to PCT/US2021/030328 priority Critical patent/WO2022231629A1/fr
Priority to TW111100460A priority patent/TW202245458A/zh
Publication of WO2022231629A1 publication Critical patent/WO2022231629A1/fr

Links

Classifications

    • HELECTRICITY
    • H04ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
    • H04NPICTORIAL COMMUNICATION, e.g. TELEVISION
    • H04N1/00Scanning, transmission or reproduction of documents or the like, e.g. facsimile transmission; Details thereof
    • H04N1/46Colour picture communication systems
    • H04N1/56Processing of colour picture signals
    • H04N1/60Colour correction or control
    • AHUMAN NECESSITIES
    • A61MEDICAL OR VETERINARY SCIENCE; HYGIENE
    • A61BDIAGNOSIS; SURGERY; IDENTIFICATION
    • A61B3/00Apparatus for testing the eyes; Instruments for examining the eyes
    • A61B3/0016Operational features thereof
    • A61B3/0041Operational features thereof characterised by display arrangements
    • A61B3/0058Operational features thereof characterised by display arrangements for multiple images
    • AHUMAN NECESSITIES
    • A61MEDICAL OR VETERINARY SCIENCE; HYGIENE
    • A61BDIAGNOSIS; SURGERY; IDENTIFICATION
    • A61B3/00Apparatus for testing the eyes; Instruments for examining the eyes
    • A61B3/02Subjective types, i.e. testing apparatus requiring the active assistance of the patient
    • A61B3/06Subjective types, i.e. testing apparatus requiring the active assistance of the patient for testing light sensitivity, e.g. adaptation; for testing colour vision
    • GPHYSICS
    • G09EDUCATION; CRYPTOGRAPHY; DISPLAY; ADVERTISING; SEALS
    • G09GARRANGEMENTS OR CIRCUITS FOR CONTROL OF INDICATING DEVICES USING STATIC MEANS TO PRESENT VARIABLE INFORMATION
    • G09G5/00Control arrangements or circuits for visual indicators common to cathode-ray tube indicators and other visual indicators
    • G09G5/02Control arrangements or circuits for visual indicators common to cathode-ray tube indicators and other visual indicators characterised by the way in which colour is displayed
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H04ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
    • H04NPICTORIAL COMMUNICATION, e.g. TELEVISION
    • H04N1/00Scanning, transmission or reproduction of documents or the like, e.g. facsimile transmission; Details thereof
    • H04N1/46Colour picture communication systems
    • H04N1/56Processing of colour picture signals
    • H04N1/60Colour correction or control
    • H04N1/62Retouching, i.e. modification of isolated colours only or in isolated picture areas only
    • H04N1/622Retouching, i.e. modification of isolated colours only or in isolated picture areas only with simulation on a subsidiary picture reproducer
    • GPHYSICS
    • G09EDUCATION; CRYPTOGRAPHY; DISPLAY; ADVERTISING; SEALS
    • G09GARRANGEMENTS OR CIRCUITS FOR CONTROL OF INDICATING DEVICES USING STATIC MEANS TO PRESENT VARIABLE INFORMATION
    • G09G2354/00Aspects of interface with display user
    • GPHYSICS
    • G09EDUCATION; CRYPTOGRAPHY; DISPLAY; ADVERTISING; SEALS
    • G09GARRANGEMENTS OR CIRCUITS FOR CONTROL OF INDICATING DEVICES USING STATIC MEANS TO PRESENT VARIABLE INFORMATION
    • G09G2370/00Aspects of data communication
    • G09G2370/04Exchange of auxiliary data, i.e. other than image data, between monitor and graphics controller
    • G09G2370/042Exchange of auxiliary data, i.e. other than image data, between monitor and graphics controller for monitor identification
    • GPHYSICS
    • G09EDUCATION; CRYPTOGRAPHY; DISPLAY; ADVERTISING; SEALS
    • G09GARRANGEMENTS OR CIRCUITS FOR CONTROL OF INDICATING DEVICES USING STATIC MEANS TO PRESENT VARIABLE INFORMATION
    • G09G2380/00Specific applications
    • G09G2380/08Biomedical applications

Definitions

  • Monitors may be utilized to display various color gamuts and color spaces.
  • a user may have the option of adjusting color values of the monitors to their personal preference.
  • FIG. 1 illustrates a system for color-blindness adjustment, according to an example
  • FIG. 2A and FIG. 2B are diagrams of a monitor incorporating color-blindness adjustment, according to an example
  • FIG. 3A and FIG. 3B are illustrations of user interfaces for adjusting overlay elements for color-blindness according to an example
  • FIG. 3C is an illustration of a system incorporating color-blindness adjustment to color configurable device.
  • FIG. 4 is a computing device for supporting instructions for color-blindness adjustment, according to an example.
  • a “display device” or “display” is an electronic device capable of presenting content visually.
  • Such displays may include a screen such as a liquid crystal display (LCD) panel, an organic light-emitting diode (OLED) panel, a micro light emitting diode (pLED), or other display technology.
  • a display may also include circuitry to operate the screen, such as a monitor scaler.
  • a display may be an external peripheral of a host computer, such as a monitor connectable to a desktop computer, or may be an integrated component, such as an all-in-one desktop computer, a laptop computer, a tablet computer, or a mobile phone.
  • Some users may perceive colors produced by a display differently from other users. For example, two viewers of a display may perceive the display as presenting different colors if one viewer is color-blind and the other viewer is not color-blind.
  • Some computer systems include capabilities to adjust displayable colors to assist personalized visualizations, such as assist user with color-blindness.
  • a computer application may be able to set colors of the image source to present in “color-blind mode,” where of a number of common colors outside the perceivable range for color-blindness are exchanged for those within the color-blindness perceivable range.
  • color-blind people are categorized into specific classifications, such as deuteranopia or protanopia, each person may have personalized tolerances to perception of colors.
  • a generalized preset may be limited in the assistive capabilities for each and every affected person. Any use of the word “color” herein may encompass tonality, such that a distinction between colors may be better described as a distinction between tone for a color blind user, for example.
  • a system may receive a color-blindness configuration corresponding to a type of colorblindness (e.g. deuteranopia, protanopia, etc).
  • the system receives an adjustment to a display based on the color-blindness configuration.
  • the system generates a second color-blindness configuration base on the adjustment.
  • the system applies the second color-blindness configuration and augments the color representations of onscreen elements.
  • FIG. 1 illustrates a system 100 for color-blindness adjustment, according to an example.
  • the processor 102 of the system 100 may be implemented as dedicated hardware circuitry or a virtualized logical processor.
  • the dedicated hardware circuitry may be implemented as a central processing unit (CPU).
  • CPU central processing unit
  • a dedicated hardware CPU may be implemented as a single to many-core general purpose processor.
  • a dedicated hardware CPU may also be implemented as a multi-chip solution, where more than one CPU are linked through a bus and schedule processing tasks across the more than one CPU.
  • a virtualized logical processor may be implemented across a distributed computing environment.
  • a virtualized logical processor may not have a dedicated piece of hardware supporting it. Instead, the virtualized logical processor may have a pool of resources supporting the task for which it was provisioned.
  • the virtualized logical processor may be executed on hardware circuitry; however, the hardware circuitry is not dedicated.
  • the hardware circuitry may be in a shared environment where utilization is time sliced.
  • the virtualized logical processor includes a software layer between any executing application and the hardware circuitry to handle any abstraction which also monitors and save the application state.
  • Virtual machines may be implementations of virtualized logical processors.
  • a memory 104 may be implemented in the system 100.
  • the memory 104 may be dedicated hardware circuitry to host instructions for the processor 102 to execute.
  • the memory 104 may be virtualized logical memory.
  • dedicated hardware circuitry may be implemented with dynamic random-access memory (DRAM) or other hardware implementations for storing processor instructions.
  • the virtualized logical memory may be implemented in a software abstraction which allows the instructions 106 to be executed on a virtualized logical processor, independent of any dedicated hardware implementation.
  • the system 100 may also include instructions 106.
  • the instructions 106 may be implemented in a platform specific language that the processor 102 may decode and execute.
  • the instructions 106 may be stored in the memory 104 during execution.
  • the instructions when executed may enable the processor to receive a color-blindness configuration corresponding to a type of color-blindness 108, receive an adjustment to a display based on at least the color-blindness configuration 110, generate a second color-blindness configuration corresponding to the adjustment 112, and apply, responsive to generating the second color-blindness configuration, a filter to the display, wherein the filter is based at least on the second color-blindness configuration and augments onscreen display elements 114.
  • the instructions to receive a color-blindness configuration corresponding to a type of color-blindness 108 may include a user interface.
  • the user interface may be incorporated into a monitor (not shown) attached to the system.
  • the monitor may incorporate a menu system to be rendered as an overlay on a video stream.
  • the menu system may be controlled utilizing an internal scaler processor.
  • the menu system may be navigable by a physical interface such as button inputs or a multi-directional switch.
  • the menu system may be touch enabled wherein the monitor may detect touch input on the display screen and translate that input into an interaction with the menu system.
  • the menu system may indicate a type of color-blindness as a selectable onscreen display element.
  • the type of color-blindness may correspond to a color-blindness configuration.
  • the color-blindness configuration may include a predefined set of color adjustments for the monitor, which augment displayed colors in one wavelength associated with the type of color-blindness, to another wavelength. For example, if a user selects Deuteranomaly, a predefined set of color adjustments for the monitor related to the red and green wavelengths may be identified as the color blindness configuration.
  • the instructions to receive a color-blindness configuration corresponding to a type of color-blindness 108 may incorporate a software application.
  • the software application may be executing on a computing device connected to the monitor. A video stream from the computing device to the monitor may traverse a data path across a standardized video communication interface.
  • the computing device may be connected to the monitor via a high definition multimedia interface (HDMI) cable.
  • HDMI high definition multimedia interface
  • the software application may include an interface separate from the menu system described above.
  • the software application interface may be executable within an operating system environment and provide graphical elements within a video stream sent to the monitor for display.
  • the software application may include a similar selection of the color-blindness configuration as described in the monitor inclusive implementation.
  • the software application may communicate the color-blindness configuration to the monitor via a communication channel.
  • the communication channel may be universal serial bus (USB).
  • USB universal serial bus
  • the software application provides the selected color blindness configuration to the monitor via USB, and the monitor applies the selected color-blindness configuration to the display.
  • the software application does not adjust the video stream prior to going to the monitor.
  • the instructions to receive an adjustment to a display based on at least the color-blindness configuration 110 may correspond to an additional input via a user interface from the monitor menu system.
  • the adjustment may be represented as an adjustment of the red, green and blue (RGB) values of the display after applying the color-blindness configuration.
  • the adjustment may be in other color spaces (HSV, YUV etc.) depending on the user’s preference and the display’s configuration.
  • the adjustment may be a user specified augmentation of the color-blindness configuration.
  • the adjustment is expected to be a small delta change from the color-blindness configuration.
  • the instructions to receive an adjustment to a display based on at least the color-blindness configuration 110 may correspond to an additional input via a user interface on the computing device.
  • the adjustment may correspond to a user’s chosen color space and would be expected to be a small delta change from the color-blindness configuration.
  • the software application may send the adjustment to the monitor via a communication channel such as USB.
  • the instructions generate a second color-blindness configuration corresponding to the adjustment 112.
  • the monitor applies the adjustment as a delta to the color-blindness configuration. For example, if a red value has been increased by a value, the second color-blindness configuration red value may incorporate the color blindness configuration red value plus the red delta of the adjustment.
  • the instructions to apply, responsive to generating the second color-blindness configuration, a filter to the display, wherein the filter is based at least on the second color-blindness configuration and augments onscreen display elements 114 may correspond to a rendering on the monitor display. For example, upon the generation of the second color-blindness configuration, the monitor applies a filter to the received video stream.
  • the filter may be applied by a scaler internal to a monitor, as opposed to a scaler integrated into a graphics processing unit (GPU).
  • the filter may be applied transparently from a host computing device.
  • the filter augments the color representation of the images being presented.
  • Onscreen display elements may correspond to monitor displayed elements, separate from the received video screen.
  • Onscreen display elements may include menus, targeting reticules for video games, timer displays, input selections and the like that are traditionally rendered by the monitor separate from the computing device providing the video stream.
  • the filter may be applied to make the onscreen display elements more visible to the color-blind viewer against the video stream.
  • the processor may execute instructions to send the second color-blindness configuration to a communicatively coupled color configurable device.
  • the second color-blindness configuration may be populated from the monitor to the software application executing on the computing device via USB.
  • the software application may determine if a color configurable device is coupled to the computing device.
  • Communicatively coupled color configurable devices may include accessories such as RGB mice, headsets, keyboards, ambient lighting and the like.
  • the communicative coupled color configurable devices may include non-color-blindness configurable displays enabled as secondary displays.
  • the processor may execute instructions to receive a display configuration from a second display corresponding to a capability of the second display.
  • the second display may be a heterogenous monitor from a different manufacturer.
  • the second display may vary in size and capability from the monitor.
  • a second display may present an extended display identification data (EDID) signal to the computing device upon connection.
  • the EDID may be propagated to the software application.
  • the software application may parse the EDID of the second display to determine characteristics of the display including but not limited to resolution, color space, available refresh rates, etc.
  • the software application may receive the second color-blindness configuration from the monitor. Based on the EDID, the software application may determine if the second display can apply the second color-blindness configuration.
  • the software application may create a third color-blindness configuration.
  • the third color-blindness configuration corresponds the second display’s display configuration received as EDID as well as the second color-blindness configuration previously generated.
  • the software application may send the third color-blindness configuration to the second display across a communication channel such as USB.
  • the receipt of the third color-blindness configuration corresponds to an adjustment of the second display to align the color profile of the second display with that of the monitor.
  • FIG. 2A and FIG. 2B are diagrams of a monitor 200 incorporating colorblindness adjustment, according to an example.
  • FIG. 2A illustrates the physical components associated with the monitor 200.
  • the monitor 200 provides the basis to populate a user’s ecosystem with selected color-blindness configurations.
  • the monitor 200 may interface with one or more computing devices associated with a user.
  • the monitor 200 propagates the user’s color-blindness configuration across any computing device that interacts with the monitor 200.
  • a monitor 200 may include a system on a chip (SoC) 202 and a memory 204.
  • SoC system on a chip
  • the SoC 202 may be distinct from the processor 102 from FIG. 1.
  • the SoC 202 may incorporate most of all of the common components of a computing system including but not limited to central processing unit (CPU), memory, input/output (I/O) controllers, storage, and graphics processor in a single integrated package.
  • the memory 204 illustrated in FIG. 2A may be integrated to the SoC 202 or discrete from the SoC.
  • the SoC 202 may be communicatively coupled through a memory bus to the memory 204.
  • the SoC 202 may be communicatively coupled to a non-volatile memory storage, such as FLASH memory.
  • the non-volatile memory storage may be configured to store color- blindness configurations and adjustments when the monitor 200 is power cycled or turned off.
  • the SoC 202 may incorporate I/O controllers for managing an external communication channel 208 such as USB or ThunderboltTM technology.
  • the communication channel 208 may communicatively connect the monitor 200 and a computing device 210.
  • the computing device 210 may correspond to an attached personal computer, tablet, mobile handset, or the like.
  • the computing device 210 may one of many associated with a user.
  • the computing device 210 may interface with the monitor 200 via the communication channel 208 in a specific stationary work environment where the user may use one or more computing devices.
  • a display 206 Internal to the monitor is a display 206.
  • the display 206 may be implemented in a number of technologies (e.g. OLED, LCD, etc).
  • the display 206 may be utilized to visualize a color-blindness configuration.
  • the display 206 may be controlled by a graphics processor (not shown) of the SoC 202.
  • FIG. 2B illustrates instructions to effectuate color-blindness configuration.
  • the instructions may be implemented in the memory 204 of the monitor 200 and executed by the SoC 202.
  • the instructions may be stored in the non-volatile memory 212 and loaded into memory 204 upon boot or invocation by the monitor 200.
  • input methods for a monitor 200 may correspond to the input methods of the system 100 of FIG. 1.
  • the instructions to receive to a color-blindness configuration corresponding to a type of color-blindness 250 may be input to the monitor 200 by a user input.
  • the user input may correspond to the actuating of a button combination or switch upon the monitor 200 as described in reference to FIG. 1.
  • the actuating of the button combination or switch may correspond with movements to navigate an onscreen display element representing a menu.
  • the menu may incorporate different types of color-blindness which a user may select.
  • the user input may correspond to a touch screen display. The user may select by directly touching the display 206 and thereby indicating the selected type of color blindness.
  • the instructions may cause the processor to store the color-blindness configuration in the non-volatile memory storage 252.
  • the SoC 202 may store the color-blindness type as a colorblindness configuration in the non-volatile memory 212.
  • the color-blindness configuration corresponds to a predefined color configuration for the various types of color-blindness.
  • Each category of color-blindness may have a configuration stored in the non-volatile memory as a set of predefined color blindness configurations.
  • the SoC 202 may store a mapping to an index in a lookup table corresponding to the associated predefined color configuration.
  • an adjustment to the predefined color configuration may be stored with the index and applied upon indexing into the set of predefined color configurations.
  • Instructions may cause the SoC 202 to receive a notification from the communication channel that a computing device has been attached 254.
  • the communications channel 208 may carry a notification to the SoC 202 to indicate that the computing device is attached.
  • the computing device 210 may transmit a notification of attachment across the communication channel 208 upon discovering continuity between another device. Based on the notification, the SoC 202 may interpret the type of computing device 208 attached.
  • Instructions may cause the SoC 202 to retrieve, responsive to the notification, the color-blindness configuration from the non-volatile memory 256.
  • the SoC 202 may retrieve the color-blindness configuration based on the index.
  • the SoC 202 may index into the non-volatile memory and retrieve color-blindness configuration from the set of predefined color configurations.
  • the SoC 202 may store the retrieved color-blindness configuration in memory 204.
  • the SoC 202 may also utilize any adjustment stored in the non-volatile memory with the index corresponding to the color-blindness type, to modify the color-blindness configuration stored in memory.
  • the SoC 202 may increment or decrement any values of the retrieve color-blindness configuration based on the adjustment.
  • Instructions may cause the SoC 202 to send the color-blindness configuration to the computing device 258.
  • the SoC 202 may package the color-blindness configuration resident in memory 204 as well as any applied adjustment (if any) for transmittal to the computing device 210.
  • the SoC 202 may package the colorblindness configuration in a form suitable for the communication channel 208, so that upon receipt at the computing device 210, the computing device may decode the package properly.
  • the computing device may affect the color-blindness configuration on any displays associated with itself. For example, if the computing device 210 is a laptop computer, the received color-blindness configuration may be applied to the display internal of the laptop computer, thereby matching the color blindness configuration of both the computing device 210 and the monitor 200.
  • FIG. 3A and FIG. 3B are illustrations of user interfaces 300A, 300B for adjusting overlay elements for color-blindness according to an example.
  • FIG. 3A illustrates one implementation of a color-blindness configuration selection user interface.
  • a color-blindness overlay 302 may be displayed.
  • an Ishihara plate is utilized to illustrate the linkage to color-blindness.
  • the color-blindness overlay 302 may be a more common onscreen display element such as a menu element (for configuring the display), at targeting reticle (for video gaming), a timer widget (for speed running) to name a few.
  • the color blindness overlay 302 allows the user to see a visual representation of the color blindness configuration for a selected type of color-blindness.
  • a user may select one of the choices in the color-blindness configuration user interface 304. Upon selecting, either by a touch input registered on the display, or through a traditional button navigation entry on the display, the user may see the color filter applied based on the color-blindness configuration selected.
  • the corresponding color-blindness configuration may be stored to memory.
  • FIG. 3B illustrates one implementation of a color-blindness adjustment selection user interface 306. Similar to the color-blindness configuration selection user interface 304, the color-blindness adjustment selection user interface 306 allows the user to adjust the color-blindness configuration. As described previously, the adjustment allows the user to adapt the color-blindness configuration to their personal preference.
  • three value sliders are illustrated in the color- blindness configuration selection user interface 306. The three value sliders may correspond to a value corresponding to the color space of the display 206. The user may manipulate the three value sliders in a similar method to how the colorblindness configuration selection user interface 304 is manipulated. As the user manipulates the color-blindness adjustment user interface 306, the color-blindness overlay 302 is updated to reflect those changes.
  • FIG. 3C is an illustration of a system 300C incorporating color-blindness adjustment to color configurable device.
  • a display 206 may be integrated into a monitor 312.
  • the monitor 312 may be integrated into a larger system 300C to include a computing device 308 (illustrated as a desktop computer) as well as an accessory 310 (illustrated as a color configurable mouse).
  • the monitor 312 may be communicatively coupled to the computing device 308 utilizing a standardized video transmission cable, such as HDMI or Display Port (not shown).
  • the computing device 308 may be connected to the monitor 312 via a communication channel such as USB as well.
  • the accessory 310 may be communicatively coupled to the computing device 308 wirelessly or via a wire.
  • the accessory 310 may be connected via a USB interface.
  • the accessory 310 may be communicatively coupled via a wireless standard such as Bluetooth® or utilizing a USB radio frequency receiver.
  • the display 206 and the onscreen display element 302 may be updated to reflect any selections or adjustments from the color-blindness adjustment user interface 306.
  • the computing device 308 may receive a notification from the monitor 312 that a color-blindness configuration or adjustment has been received.
  • the computing device 308 may transmit the color-blindness configuration or adjustment to the accessory 310.
  • the accessory 310 may replicate the changes made by the user.
  • the accessory 310 may be communicatively coupled to the monitor 312 via a wired or wireless connection.
  • the monitor 312 may receive a notification from the accessory 310 that the accessory has been attached to the monitor.
  • the monitor 312 may determine the capabilities of the accessory 310.
  • the monitor 312 may query the accessory 310 to determine if the accessory is a color configurable device.
  • the monitor 312 may create an accessory color blindness configuration based on the capabilities of the accessory 310.
  • the accessory color-blindness configuration may correspond to a color palate based on the selected color-blindness configuration of which the accessory 310 is capable of displaying.
  • the monitor 312 may send the accessory color-blindness configuration to the accessory 310. If the capabilities of the accessory 310 are not capable of displaying the accessory color-blindness configuration, the monitor 312 may retrieve the color-blindness configuration from non-volatile memory and send the color-blindness configuration to the accessory 310.
  • the accessory may transmit a unique identifier.
  • the monitor 312 may receive the unique identifier.
  • the monitor 312 may store the accessory blindness configuration in non-volatile memory based on the unique identifier.
  • the unique identifier upon subsequent receipt from the monitor 312, indicates that the same accessory 310 has been connected to the monitor previously and thereby the monitor 312 may retrieve and apply the accessory blindness configuration.
  • FIG. 4 is a computing device 400 for supporting instructions for color blindness adjustment, according to an example.
  • the computing device 400 depicts a processor 102 and a storage medium 404 and, as an example of the computing device 400 performing its operations, the storage medium 404 may include instructions 406-418 that are executable by the processor 102.
  • the processor 102 may be synonymous with the processor 102 referenced in FIG. 1. Additionally, the processor 102 may include but is not limited to central processing units (CPUs).
  • the storage medium 404 can be said to store program instructions that, when executed by processor 102, implement the components of the computing device 400.
  • the executable program instructions stored in the storage medium 404 include, as an example, instructions to receive a color-blindness configuration corresponding to a type of color-blindness 406, instructions to access a lookup table corresponding to the color-blindness configuration and a stored preset for a set of color-blindness filters 408, instructions to retrieve a filter from the set of color blindness filters 410, instructions to receive a user specified adjustment 412, instructions to create a second color-blindness configuration based on at least the user specified adjustment and the color-blindness filter 414, instructions to adjust a display based on at least the second color-blindness configuration, wherein the adjustment augments an onscreen display element 416, and instructions to send the second color-blindness configuration to a communicatively coupled color configurable device 418.
  • Storage medium 404 represents generally any number of memory components capable of storing instructions that can be executed by processor 102.
  • Storage medium 404 is non-transitory in the sense that it does not encompass a transitory signal but instead is made up of at least one memory component configured to store the relevant instructions.
  • the storage medium 404 may be a non-transitory computer-readable storage medium.
  • Storage medium 404 may be implemented in a single device or distributed across devices.
  • processor 102 represents any number of processors capable of executing instructions stored by storage medium 404.
  • Processor 102 may be integrated in a single device or distributed across devices. Further, storage medium 404 may be fully or partially integrated in the same device as processor 102, or it may be separate but accessible to that computing device 400 and the processor 102.
  • the program instructions 406-418 may be part of an installation package that, when installed, can be executed by processor 102 to implement the components of the computing device 400.
  • storage medium 404 may be a portable medium such as a CD, DVD, or flash drive, or a memory maintained by a server from which the installation package can be downloaded and installed.
  • the program instructions may be part of an application or applications already installed.
  • storage medium 404 can include integrated memory such as a hard drive, solid state drive, or the like.

Abstract

La présente divulgation concerne, selon certains aspects, un exemple de mise en œuvre d'un système, d'un dispositif de surveillance et d'un support de stockage pour un réglage de daltonisme. Le système comprend un processeur, une mémoire et des instructions lisibles par ordinateur pour recevoir une configuration de daltonisme correspondant à un type de daltonisme. Le processeur reçoit un réglage sur une unité d'affichage sur la base d'au moins la configuration de daltonisme. Le processeur génère une seconde configuration de daltonisme correspondant au réglage. Le processeur applique, en réponse à la génération de la seconde configuration de daltonisme, un filtre à l'unité d'affichage. Le filtre est basé au moins sur la seconde configuration de daltonisme et augmente les éléments d'affichage à l'écran.
PCT/US2021/030328 2021-04-30 2021-04-30 Réglage de daltonisme WO2022231629A1 (fr)

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PCT/US2021/030328 WO2022231629A1 (fr) 2021-04-30 2021-04-30 Réglage de daltonisme
TW111100460A TW202245458A (zh) 2021-04-30 2022-01-05 色盲調整技術

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PCT/US2021/030328 WO2022231629A1 (fr) 2021-04-30 2021-04-30 Réglage de daltonisme

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