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  2. Defective pixel - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Defective_pixel

    A defective pixel or a dead pixel is a pixel on a liquid crystal display (LCD) that is not functioning properly. The ISO standard ISO 13406-2 distinguishes between three different types of defective pixels, [ 1 ] while hardware companies tend to have further distinguishing types.

  3. LED-backlit LCD - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/LED-backlit_LCD

    Televisions that use a combination of an LED backlight with an LCD panel are sometimes advertised as LED TVs, although they are not truly LED displays. [1] [2] Backlit LCDs cannot achieve true blacks for pixels, unlike OLED and microLED displays. This is because even in the "off" state, black pixels still allow some light from the backlight ...

  4. Backlight - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Backlight

    A backlight is a form of illumination used in liquid-crystal displays (LCDs) that provides illumination from the back or side of a display panel. LCDs do not produce light by themselves, so they need illumination (ambient light or a special light source) to produce a visible image.

  5. Liquid-crystal display - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Liquid-crystal_display

    18 parallel CCFLs as backlight for a 42-inch (106 cm) LCD TV WLED array: The LCD panel is lit by a full array of white LEDs placed behind a diffuser behind the panel. LCDs that use this implementation will usually have the ability to dim or completely turn off the LEDs in the dark areas of the image being displayed, effectively increasing the ...

  6. TFT LCD - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/TFT_LCD

    A control mechanism for the backlight is usually included on the same controller board. The low level interface of STN , DSTN , or TFT display panels use either single ended TTL 5 V signal for older displays or TTL 3.3 V for slightly newer displays that transmits the pixel clock, horizontal sync , vertical sync , digital red, digital green ...

  7. Display motion blur - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Display_motion_blur

    Display motion blur, also called HDTV blur and LCD motion blur, refers to several visual artifacts (anomalies or unintended effects affecting still or moving images) that are frequently found on modern consumer high-definition television sets and flat-panel displays for computers.

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  9. Motion interpolation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Motion_interpolation

    The TV is natively only capable of displaying 120 frames per second, and basic motion interpolation which inserts between 1 and 4 new frames between existing ones. Typically the only difference from a "120 Hz" TV in this case is the addition of a strobing backlight , which flickers on and off at 240 Hz, once after every 120 Hz frame.