Color quality scale
Color quality scale is a color rendering score – a quantitative measure of the ability of a light source to reproduce colors of illuminated objects. Developed by researchers at NIST the metric aims to overcome some of the issues inherent in the widely used color rendering index.
- The color space used in CIE Ra is outdated and nonuniform, and CQS uses CIELAB as a replacement.
- The Von Kries chromatic adaptation transform used by Ra does not perform as well as other available models. CQS uses CMCCAT2000.
- CIE Ra is based on desaturated samples, and a lamp's performance in rendering these samples faithfully is not necessarily linked to how it may perform with samples of higher saturation. CQS uses higher saturation samples.
- ‘Pure’ fidelity does not account for desired chromaticity changes. Increased saturation might be preferred. CQS does not penalise against increases in saturation.
- In CIE Ra the arithmetic mean is taken of the color differences for the individual samples. In CQS the individual results are combined through a root mean square instead, so that a small number of poorly rendered objects reflects with greater strength in the overall result.
- Negative values of CQS are made impossible due to their potential for consumer confusion.
- CCTs of lower than 2800K are penalised so that the CQS is more representative of their actual color rendering as opposed to their fidelity.