TY - JOUR
T1 - Simple tone curves: theory and applications
AU - Bennett, James
AU - Finlayson, Graham D.
N1 - Data Availability
The MIT-Adobe FiveK dataset is available at https://doi.org/10.1109/CVPR.2011.5995413. The anonymised data collected from the psychophysical pairwise preference experiment are available from the corresponding author on reasonable request. The Gardline dataset was used under licence and is not publicly available.
Acknowledgements
The experiments were carried out on the High Performance Computing Cluster supported by the Research and Specialist Computing Support service at the University of East Anglia.
PY - 2026/5/18
Y1 - 2026/5/18
N2 - A single tone curve that remaps the brightnesses of each image pixel is a simple and widely deployed way to enhance an image. Tone curves might be crafted by individual users or determined algorithmically in camera processing pipelines. The precise shape of the tone curve is not a priori strongly constrained, other than it is usually limited to increasing functions of brightness. In this paper, we constrain the shape further and define a tone curve to be simple if it has no or one inflexion point. With respect to our representation, wiggly tone curves have several inflexion points and are deemed to be complex. A key contribution of our work is to show how we can best approximate a complex curve with a simple counterpart. For the MIT-Adobe FiveK dataset, comprising thousands of images that are tone-adjusted by photographic experts, we calculate corresponding simple tone curve adjusted images. Using objective similarity metrics, we find that simple curves deliver equally good image enhancement. In terms of preference experiments, simple curves deliver slightly preferred images compared to complex counterparts. Similar results are reported for a second smaller underwater image dataset.
AB - A single tone curve that remaps the brightnesses of each image pixel is a simple and widely deployed way to enhance an image. Tone curves might be crafted by individual users or determined algorithmically in camera processing pipelines. The precise shape of the tone curve is not a priori strongly constrained, other than it is usually limited to increasing functions of brightness. In this paper, we constrain the shape further and define a tone curve to be simple if it has no or one inflexion point. With respect to our representation, wiggly tone curves have several inflexion points and are deemed to be complex. A key contribution of our work is to show how we can best approximate a complex curve with a simple counterpart. For the MIT-Adobe FiveK dataset, comprising thousands of images that are tone-adjusted by photographic experts, we calculate corresponding simple tone curve adjusted images. Using objective similarity metrics, we find that simple curves deliver equally good image enhancement. In terms of preference experiments, simple curves deliver slightly preferred images compared to complex counterparts. Similar results are reported for a second smaller underwater image dataset.
KW - Image enhancement
KW - Psychophysical experiment
KW - Quadratic programming
KW - Tone curves
KW - Tone mapping
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/105039576982
U2 - 10.1007/s00371-026-04505-y
DO - 10.1007/s00371-026-04505-y
M3 - Article
SN - 0178-2789
VL - 42
SP - 1
EP - 18
JO - The Visual Computer
JF - The Visual Computer
IS - 8
M1 - 302
ER -