Real and complex analysis, 3rd ed.
Real and complex analysis, 3rd ed.
Digital image processing
The display of characters using gray level sample arrays
SIGGRAPH '80 Proceedings of the 7th annual conference on Computer graphics and interactive techniques
Computer display of curved surfaces.
Computer display of curved surfaces.
Toward a mathematical theory of perception.
Toward a mathematical theory of perception.
Rectangular convolution for fast filtering of characters
SIGGRAPH '87 Proceedings of the 14th annual conference on Computer graphics and interactive techniques
Analytic antialiasing with prism splines
SIGGRAPH '95 Proceedings of the 22nd annual conference on Computer graphics and interactive techniques
Curve Fitting with Conic Splines
ACM Transactions on Graphics (TOG)
Constant-time filtering with space-variant kernels
SIGGRAPH '88 Proceedings of the 15th annual conference on Computer graphics and interactive techniques
A Psychophysical Approach to Assessing the Quality of Antialiased Images
IEEE Computer Graphics and Applications
Perceptually Tuned Generation of Grayscale Fonts
IEEE Computer Graphics and Applications
Anti-aliased line drawing using brush extrusion
SIGGRAPH '83 Proceedings of the 10th annual conference on Computer graphics and interactive techniques
Scalable realtime glyph rendering on consumer level graphics hardware: a hybrid approach
VIIP '07 The Seventh IASTED International Conference on Visualization, Imaging and Image Processing
Analytic Anti-Aliasing of Linear Functions on Polytopes
Computer Graphics Forum
Parameterization-Aware MIP-Mapping
Computer Graphics Forum
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Recently several investigators have studied the problem of displaying text characters on grey level raster scan displays. Despite arguments suggesting that grey level displays are equivalent to very high resolution bitmaps, the performance of grey level displays has been disappointing. This paper will show that much of the problem can be traced to inappropriate antialiasing procedures. Instead of the classical (sin x)/x filter, the situation calls for a filter with characteristics matched both to the nature of display on CRTs and to the human visual system. We give examples to illustrate the problems of the existing methods and the advantages of the new methods. Although the techniques are described in terms of text, the results have application to the general antialiasing problem—at least in theory if not in practice.