dithering
n.
mixing of colors, blending of pixels of different colors in order to create an area of intermediate color (Computers)
dither
v.
hesitate; tremble; be excited or agitated
Dither
Dither is an intentionally applied form of
noise, used to randomize
quantization error, thereby preventing large-scale patterns such as contouring that are more objectionable than uncorrelated noise. Dither is routinely used in processing of both digital audio and digital video data, and is often one of the last stages of audio production to
compact disc.
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dithering
Noun
1. the process of representing intermediate colors by patterns of tiny colored dots that simulate the desired color
(hypernym) video digitizing
dither
Noun
1. an excited state of agitation; "he was in a dither"; "there was a terrible flap about the theft"
(synonym) pother, fuss, tizzy, flap
(hypernym) agitation
(derivation) flap, pother
Verb
1. act nervously; be undecided; be uncertain
(hypernym) fret
2. make a fuss; be agitated
(synonym) flap, pother
(hypernym) fuss, niggle, fret
(derivation) pother, fuss, tizzy, flap
dithering
<
data,
algorithm> A technique used in
quantisation processes such as
graphics and
audio to reduce or remove the correlation between noise and signal.
Dithering is used in
computer graphics to create additional colors and shades from an existing
palette by interspersing
pixels of different colours. On a
monochrome display, areas of grey are created by varying the proportion of black and white pixels. In colour displays and printers, colours and textures are created by varying the proportions of existing colours. The different colours can either be distributed randomly or regularly. The higher the
resolution of the display, the smoother the dithered colour will appear to the eye.
Dithering doesn't reduce resolution. There are three types: regular dithering which uses a very regular predefined pattern; random dither where the pattern is a random noise; and pseudo random dither which uses a very large, very regular, predefined pattern.
Dithering is used to create patterns for use as backgrounds, fills and shading, as well as for creating
halftones for printing. When used for printing is it very sensitive to paper properties. Dithering can be combined with
rasterising. It is not related to
anti-aliasing.
(2003-07-20)
(c) Copyright 1993 by Denis Howe
dithering
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