Influence of the accuracy and precision of a reflectance spectrum measurement on colorimetric values.
Poljicak, Ante ; Agic, Darko ; Gojo, Miroslav 等
1. INTRODUCTION
Out on the market there are many different applications and devices
used in ever growing color industry. It is now possible to make
colorimetric measurement almost without any knowledge of the field
whatsoever. Color spaces like CIE XYZ and CIE L*a*b* are used
extensively in the broad spectra of applications from the publishing
industry, over the paper industry, to the color industry. For mentioned
applications, it is important to be capable to acquire colorimetric data
in fast, easy, and precise way.
The usual colorimetric value used extensively in all industries
that work with color is a colorimetric difference. It is the metric of
difference between two measured color specimens. Since the colorimetric
difference is so popular in color industry, it is important that a
measuring device has a sufficient measuring accuracy and precision to
minimize its influence on the calculated colorimetric difference.
The goal of this paper is to evaluate the measuring precision and
accuracy of different spectrophotometers and show the influence that
they have on colorimetric difference.
The rest of the paper is organized as follows. In chapter 2 a
theoretic background is given. Chapter 3 explains the experiment. The
chapter 4 concludes the experiment with the results and discussion.
2. BACKGROUND
A measuring device should be both, accurate and precise. The
accuracy of a measurement device is the degree of closeness of
measurements of a quantity to its actual (true) value. The precision of
a measurement device is the degree to which repeated measurements under
unchanged conditions show the same results (Taylor, 1999).
2.1 Accuracy
Therefore, the accuracy of a spectrophotometer can be defined as
the difference between the mean value of measurements and the reference
value:
A = [R.sub.0] - 1/n [n.summation over (i=1)] [R.sub.i](1)
Where A is the accuracy, [R.sub.0] is a referent value, [R.sub.i]
is the ith measurement of spectral reflectance, and n is the number of
measurements.
2.2 Precision
The precision of spectrophotometer can be defined as the variance
of data accuired by measurements.
[FIGURE 1 OMITTED]
As a metric for the evaluation of the measurement precision of a
spectrophotometer a pooled standard deviation is used. Poled standard
deviation estimates standard deviation of the several different samples
of which mean may vary but the true standard deviation is assumed to
remain the same (McNaught and Wilkinson, 1997):
[MATHEMATICAL EXPRESSION NOT REPRODUCIBLE IN ASCII] (2)
Where [[sigma].sub.p] is pooled standard deviation, n is size of
ith sample, and [[sigma].sub.i] is standard deviation of the ith sample.
2.3 Colorimetric formulae
According to a tri-stimulus theory of the color perception color
can be represented by three parameters such as CIE XYZ or CIE L*a*b*
(Berns, 2000). These values are caluculated from a reflectance spectrum.
CIE L*a*b* values are defined as (Wyszecki and Stiles, 1982):
L* = 116f (Y/[Y.sub.n]) - 16 (3)
a* = 500 [f(X/[X.sub.n])- f (Y/[Y.sub.n])] (4)
[MATHEMATICAL EXPRESSION NOT REPRODUCIBLE IN ASCII] (5)
Where L*, a* and b* represent, lightness, red-green, and
yellow-blue coordinate respectively; X, Y, Z are the CIE XYZ tristimulus
values of the sample; [X.sub.n], [Y.sub.n], [Z.sub.n] are the CIE XYZ
tristimulus values of the reference white point.
To show the influence of the accuracy and precision of a
spectrophotometer in real life situations the colorimetric difference
[DELTA]E, should be used. It is defined as a geometric distance between
two coresponding points in the CIE L*a*b* color space (Hunt, 1991).
[FIGURE 2 OMITTED]
[MATHEMATICAL EXPRESSION NOT REPRODUCIBLE IN ASCII] (6)
Where [L.sub.1]*, [a.sub.1]*, [b.sub.1]* and [L.sub.2]*,
[a.sub.2]*, [b.sub.2]* are CIE L*a*b* values for the two colors that are
compared.
3. EXPERIMENTAL
The experiment was conducted using five different
spectrophotometers: iOne, Spectrolino and SpectroEye manufactured by
Gretag Macbeth, Pulse and 939 Spectrodensitometer manufactured by Xrite.
All measuring devices were calibrated according to manufacturer's
recomendations.
Measurements were made on five color patches (cyan, magenta,
yellow, black, and white) with an unknown spectral reflectance, and on
the standard white reference patch with the known spectral reflectance.
For each patch, and every spectrophotometer, 50 measurements were made.
To have standard measuring conditions all spectrophotometers used D65
light source with 2[degrees] standard observer. The reflectance was
measured from 400 nm to 700 nm with the interval of 10 nm. The
temperature of the laboratory during measurement was held constant at 23
[degrees]C [+ or -] 2 [degrees]C which is within the manufacturers'
recommendations.
For the acquisition of data from Gretag Macbeth iONE, Spectrolino
and SpectroEye KeyWizard application was used. Xrite 939 and Xrite Pulse
used ColorShop X application. However, to minimize any possible
influence from using different applications, only spectral reflectance
was acquired. With the acquired data, calculations for CIE L*a*b*
values, and colorimetric difference [DELTA]E were made using spreadsheet
calculator.
The Acuracy of a spectrophotometer was determined by measurement of
the standard referent white patch with known spectral reflectance. The
accuracy was quantified using the metric of differance of its mean value
and the referent value, for every interval, and for every color patch.
As the estimate of the referent values of patches with unknown spectral
reflectances, the mean values of spectral reflectance acquired with the
spectrophotometer that showed the higest accuracy in the measurement of
referent white patch was taken.
The precision of the spectrophotometer was determined by pooled
standard deviation calculated from the measurements of the color
patches.
To show the influence of the accuracy and precision for each pach
CIE XYZ values, CIE L*a*b* values, and colorimetric difference between
referent mean value and mean values of tested measuring devices were
calculated. Since we did not know the reference values of the color
patches with unknown spectral reflectance, we used the mean values of
the most accurate spectrophotometer.
4. RESULTS AND DISCUSSION
From table 1 it can be seen that the most accurate measurements
gave Gretag Macbeth Spectrolino with the median and standard deviation
of accuracy 0,13 and 0,22 respectively. Xrite 939 folows close behind.
The worst results showed Xrite Pulse with the median of 4,64 and
standard deviation of 0,73. These results are shown in figure 1, where
is easy to see the difference of the mean of measured spectral
reflectances and the referent spectral reflectance. Spectrolino and 939
had very accurate measurement through the whole spectrum, while other
spectrophotometers show more deviation from the referent values.
The precision was estimated with pooled standard deviation of
acquired data. The most precise measurements gave Spectrolino and 939
spectrophotometers with [[sigma].sub.p] of 0,05, while the most
inprecise whas iONE with [[sigma].sub.p] of 0,15.
The influence of an accuracy and precison on colorimetric
difference [DELTA]E is shown in table 2. Pulse spectrophotometer, having
the worst accuracy gave the largest colorimetric difference. Mean
[DELTA]E was 2,19 witch is unacceptable for serious use in color
industry.
5. CONCLUSION
It can be concluded that the accuracy has significant influence on
colorimetric difference. If the accuracy of the measuring device is not
sufficient, it can give large colorimetric difference that can lead user
to wrong conclusions about color results the user wants to evaluate.
Main limitation of the research is the small number of evaluated
spectrophotometers. However, even with the small evaluated set it is
obvious that the quality of the device, in terms of the measurement
precision and accurary, is very important for any kind of color evaluation. Therefore, a higher quality spectrophotometer is mandatory
for work with color.
6. REFERENCES
Berns, R.S. (2000), Billmeyer and Saltzman's Principles of
Color Technology, third ed., John Wiley & Sons Inc., New York
Hunt, R.W.G., (1991) Measuring Colour, 2nd ed., Ellis Horwood
Limited, England
McNaught, A.D., Wilkinson, A., (1997), Compendium of Chemical
Terminology, 2nd ed., Blackwell Science
Taylor, J.R. (1999) An Introduction to Error Analysis: The Study of
Uncertainties in Physical Measurements, University Science Books
Wyszecki, G. Stiles, W.S., (1982), Color Science: Concepts and
Methods, Quantitative Data and Formulae, Wiley
Tab. 1. Results of the statistical evaluation of measurement
data
Device medA maxA minA std A [[sigma].sub.p]
Spectrolino 0,13 0,70 -0,15 0,22 0,05
iONE -1,20 -0,58 -1,78 0,38 0,15
SpectroEye -0,78 0,09 -2,13 0,57 0,10
Pulse 4,64 5,41 6,64 0,73 0,11
939 -0,12 0,24 -0,19 0,24 0,05
Tab 2. Results of the statistical evaluation of acquired data
mean std min max median
iONE 0,84 0,45 0,29 1,35 0,77
SpectroEye 0,78 0,44 0,34 1,28 0,69
Pulse 2,19 0,95 0,72 3,04 2,35
939 1,70 0,69 0,89 2,76 1,53