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I’m trying to get a uniformed value that indicates a light level from the Android back (main) camera.

I’m using several Android devices and the object captured is absolutely static (same object in the same light condition, in the same angle and the same position) and I get deferent value results. My calculation is based on Aperture, ISO, exposure time and exposure compensation. I tried to do:

EV = AV + TV = log(Aperture^2,2) + log(1/exposure_time,2).

I also tried some other methods from the following article: http://dougkerr.net/pumpkin/articles/APEX.pdf

Anyhow… the results I get differ from device to device…

Does anyone know how to solve it? Maybe there are more values that I’m ignoring?

Thanks.

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  • In photography, you would use a light calibration card. The calibration card normalizes the light measurement against a known standard. link
    – Fred F
    Feb 19, 2013 at 17:14
  • Thanks Fred, what is the known standard?
    – Ofer Orgal
    Feb 20, 2013 at 8:25
  • The calibration card is the known standard. When a camera looks at a room, it is measuring reflected light. The amount of light viewed will vary based on the surface the light reflects off of. The calibration card will reflect (without glare) a specific percentage of light, the reflection will be perfectly gray and smooth. To calibrate a camera, the card can be viewed under fixed lighting situation such as direct sunlight, then have other light situations measured against the known constant.
    – Fred F
    Feb 20, 2013 at 15:06
  • Another method of light metering that light meters have frosteddomes over the sensor. The frosted dome causes the light to smooth and scatter to allow direct measurement of light. Since you are using a camera, my first thought was calibrating a camera. I'm not sure for a camera what would make a good choice to act as the frosted dome. Again, the baseline measurement would need a known light source, such as sunlight. img.wonderhowto.com/img/38/14/63475358911345/0/…
    – Fred F
    Feb 20, 2013 at 15:28
  • I need a simpler method... a more mathematical method.
    – Ofer Orgal
    Feb 28, 2013 at 12:07

1 Answer 1

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I'm not sure how much you proceeded with this but I thought some answers might help you come to some conclusion.

With many Android devices, the Image Signal Processing chain can vary from one model to another, depending of course on who the makes the ISP and even the tunings that are done for the device. Some models may have tuned their devices successfully so you get some certain level of expected results, but others may not.

Other factors include unknown tone curves and other post-processing blocks which are hard to find out exactly unless you've been working in developing the device.

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