January 25, 2017
Journal Article

What is the Reference? An Examination of Alternatives to the Reference Sources Used in IES TM-30-15

Abstract

A study was undertaken to document the role of the reference illuminant in the IES TM-30-15 method for evaluating color rendition. TM-30-15 relies on a relative reference scheme; that is, the reference illuminant and test source always have the same correlated color temperature (CCT). The reference illuminant is a Planckian radiator, model of daylight, or combination of those two, depending on the exact CCT of the test source. Three alternative reference schemes were considered: 1) either using all Planckian radiators or all daylight models; 2) using only one of ten possible illuminants (Planckian, daylight, or equal energy), regardless of the CCT of the test source; 3) using an off-Planckian reference illuminant (i.e., a source with a negative Duv). No reference scheme is inherently superior to another, with differences in metric values largely a result of small differences in gamut shape of the reference alternatives. While using any of the alternative schemes is more reasonable in the TM-30-15 evaluation framework than it was with the CIE CRI framework, the differences still ultimately manifest only as changes in interpretation of the results. References are employed in color rendering measures to provide a familiar point of comparison, not to establish an ideal source.

Revised: April 19, 2017 | Published: January 25, 2017

Citation

Royer M.P. 2017. What is the Reference? An Examination of Alternatives to the Reference Sources Used in IES TM-30-15. LEUKOS - The Journal of the Illuminating Engineering Society of North America 13, no. 2:71-89. PNNL-SA-119373. doi:10.1080/15502724.2016.1255146