1st Edition

Electro-Optical Displays

Edited By Mohammad A. Karim Copyright 1992
864 Pages
by CRC Press

864 Pages
by CRC Press

Covers principles, applications, and issues pertaining to all major elecro-optical displays presently in use, with discussion of display evaluation characteristics and human factor topics. Coverage includes: liquid crystal (LC) display properties, matrix addressing, and photoaddressing issues; time-

About the Series

Preface

Contributors

Part I Display Fundamentals

Intensifier and Cathode-Ray Tube Technologies

Mohammad A. Karim and A.F.M. Yusuf Haider

Liquid-Crystal Display Device Fundamentals

David Armitage

Microelectronics in Active-Matrix LCDs and Image Sensors

William den Boer, F.C. Luo, and Zvi Yaniv

Flat-Panel Displays

Alan Sobel

Color Image Display with Black-and-White Film

Guo-Guang Mu, Zhi-Liang Fang, Xu-Ming Wang, and Yu-Guang Kuang

Part II Display Systems

Projection Display Technologies

Karen E. Jachimowicz

Stereoscopic Display

Larry F. Hodges

Peripheral Vision Displays

Harry M. Assenheim

Holographic Head-Up Displays

Robert B. Wood

Biocular Display Optics

Philip J. Rogers and Michael H. Freeman

Part III Evaluation of Displays

Standardization of Nondiscrete Displays

Abdul Ahad S. Awwal

Discrete Display Devices and Analysis Techniques

John C. Feltz

Analytical Modeling and Digital Simulation of Scanning Charge-Coupled Device Imaging Systems

Terrence S. Lomheim and Linda S. Kalman

Display and Enhancement of Infrared Images

Jerry Silverman and Virgil E. Vickers

Part IV Display Issues

The Human Factor Considerations of Image Intensification and Thermal Imaging Systems

Clarence E. Rash and Robert W. Verona

Color Control in Digital Displays

Celeste McCollough Howard

The Human Factors of Helmet-Mounted Displays and Sights

Maxwell J. Wells and Michael Haas

Perceptual Effects of Spatiotemporal Sampling

Julie Mapes Lindholm

Electro-Optic Displays—The System Perspective

Donald L. Moon

Index

Biography

Mohammad A. Karim is Director, Center for Electro-Optics, and Associate Professor, Electrical Engineering Department and Electro-Optics Program, the University of Dayton, Ohio. The author or coauthor of over 125 publications and three books, he is a member of the Optical Society of America and the Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers. Dr. Karim received the B.S. degree (1976) in physics from the University of Dacca, Dacca, Bangladesh, and the M.S. degree (1978) in physics and the M.S.E.E. (1979) and Ph.D. (1981) degrees in electrical engineering from the University of Alabama, Tuscaloosa.