Printer Friendly
The Free Library
19,607,059 articles and books
Member login
User name  
Password 
 
Join us Forgot password?

Color Magic: Xerox Discovers How to Return the Original Color to Black-and-White Fax Images.


SCOTTSDALE, Ariz. -- When a colored document is faxed on a black-and-white machine, is the color gone for good?

Not necessarily, according to according to
prep.
1. As stated or indicated by; on the authority of: according to historians.

2. In keeping with: according to instructions.

3.
 Karen M. Braun, a Xerox Corporation (company) XEROX Corporation -

http://xerox.com/.

See also XEROX PARC, XEROX Network Services.
 (NYSE NYSE

See: New York Stock Exchange
: XRX XRX Xerox Corporation (stock symbol) ) imaging scientist and co-developer of the first way to encode documents so that the colors of the original image can be recovered from a print made on a black-and-white printer, fax or copier.

At the Society for Imaging Science and Technology's annual Color Imaging Conference here, Braun and Ricardo L. deQueiroz, who's on the faculty of the Universidade de Brasilia in Brazil, are describing their work in a paper called "Color to Gray and Back: Color Embedding into Textured Gray Images."

The presentation is one of six being made by Xerox researchers at the conference this week.

Braun and deQueiroz began with a common problem. When a color image A (digital) color image is a digital image that includes color information for each pixel.

For visually acceptable results, it is necessary (and almost sufficient) to provide three samples (color channels
 is copied, printed or faxed on a black-and-white device, the colors are converted to shades of Noun 1. shades of - something that reminds you of someone or something; "aren't there shades of 1948 here?"
reminder - an experience that causes you to remember something
 gray. Two different colors with the same luminance The amount of brightness, measured in lumens, that is given off by a pixel or area on a screen. For example, dark red and bright red would have the same chrominance, but a different luminance.  - or perceived brightness - may "map" to the same shade of gray, making it impossible to interpret the information the colors carry. When that happens on graphics like pie charts or bar charts, two colors will look the same and the chart loses its information value.

While trying to figure out how to retain the information conveyed in color graphs and pictures, the researchers looked for new ways to represent color images in black-and-white. Their method turns each color into a microscopically different texture or pattern in the gray parts of an image. It makes it easy to identify colors with similar luminance value, making the pictures more pleasing and the graphs more useful.

The new method also had an unexpected benefit, according to Braun. "When you map color to textures in this way, the textures can later be decoded and converted back to color," she said.

Thus the recipient of a black-and-white fax could recover the colors of the original. It would also allow colors to be retrieved from a printed black-and-white hardcopy. Xerox has applied for a patent on the technology.

How might the technology someday be used? In practice, the part of the algorithms that code the colors could be integrated within the software of a black-and-white printer so colors could be transformed to textured grays. The decoding part of the algorithms could be part of a multifunction system's scanner, recovering the original colors so the document could be switched back to vivid color for display or print.

Braun is part of a contingent of Xerox researchers sharing their work at the annual conference for color scientists. Others presenting papers and tutorials are Raja Bala, R. Victor Klassen, Martin Maltz, Jon McElvain, and J. Michael Sanchez - a group that collectively hold 88 patents in the areas of color not of the white race; - commonly meaning, esp. in the United States, of negro blood, pure or mixed.

See also: Color
 control, calibration, characterization and image processing.

Xerox Corporation conducts work in color science, computing, digital imaging, work practices, electromechanical The use of electricity to run moving parts. Disk drives, printers and motors are examples. Electromechanical systems must be designed for the eventual deterioration of moving components that wear over time. The first TVs were electromechanical systems (see video/TV history).  systems, novel materials, and other disciplines connected to Xerox's expertise in printing and document management. The company consistently builds its inventions into business by embedding them in Xerox products and solutions, using them as the foundation for new business, or licensing or selling them to other entities. For more information, visit www.xerox.com/innovation.

NOTE TO EDITORS: For more information about Xerox and to receive its RSS (Really Simple Syndication) A syndication format that was developed by Netscape in 1999 and became very popular for aggregating updates to blogs and the news sites. RSS has also stood for "Rich Site Summary" and "RDF Site Summary.  news feeds, visit www.xerox.com/news. XEROX(R) is a trademark of XEROX CORPORATION.
COPYRIGHT 2005 Business Wire
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2005, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

 Reader Opinion

Title:

Comment:



 

Article Details
Printer friendly Cite/link Email Feedback
Publication:Business Wire
Geographic Code:1USA
Date:Nov 7, 2005
Words:565
Previous Article:Planning to Re-Gift This Holiday Season? New Research Says You Would 'Horrify' Most Americans; Holiday trends survey from Discover(R) Card finds 30...
Next Article:San Diego-Headquartered McMillin Capital Closes Third Real Estate Investment Fund; $47.6 Million Fund Invests in Land Development, Entitlement and...
Topics:



Related Articles
Transformed folk art.
Printing on demand: a new market niche.
Pixel Magic Helps Xerox Usher in New Era of High-Performance Digital Office Equipment.
Xerox delivers fastest workgroup color printer.
Xerox Sets Standard for Speed, Functionality with New Wave of 12 Office Products.
Xerox Demonstrates World's Fastest Cut-Sheet, Highlight Color Technology at Graph Expo.
Xerox Launches Industry's First Color Multifunction System with Patented 'Solid Ink' Technology; WorkCentre C2424 provides unsurpassed speed, quality...
DMI Adds Second Xerox iGen3 Press to Grow Personalized, Short-Run Color Business; ``With the iGen3 press we are no longer selling print - we are...
Xerox Launches Two Affordable Desktop Products Aimed at Small and Mid-Sized Businesses; New multifunction device starts at $399, color printer at...
Xerox Makes Color Prints, Copies Easy to Manage with Three New Multifunction Systems.

Terms of use | Copyright © 2012 Farlex, Inc. | Feedback | For webmasters | Submit articles