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Defective pixel

Defective pixels are pixels on a liquid crystal display (LCD) that are not performing as expected. The ISO standard ISO 13406-2 distinguishes between three different types of defective pixels, while hardware companies tend to have further distinguishing types. Defective pixels are pixels on a liquid crystal display (LCD) that are not performing as expected. The ISO standard ISO 13406-2 distinguishes between three different types of defective pixels, while hardware companies tend to have further distinguishing types. Similar defects can also occur in a charge-coupled device (CCD) or CMOS image sensor in digital cameras. In these devices, defective pixels fail to sense light levels correctly, whereas defective pixels in LCDs fail to reproduce light levels correctly. A dark dot defect is usually caused by a transistor in the transparent electrode layer that is stuck 'on' for TN panels or 'off' for MVA/PVA and IPS panels. In that state, the transistor places the liquid crystal material in such a way that no light ever passes through to the RGB layer of the display. A bright dot defect is a group of three sub-pixels (one pixel) all of whose transistors are 'off' for TN panels or stuck 'on' for MVA/PVA panels. This allows all light to pass through to the RGB layer, creating a bright white pixel that is always on. This is commonly known as a 'hot pixel'. A partial sub-pixel defect is a manufacturing defect in which the RGB film layer was not cut properly. A TAB fault is caused by a connection failure from the TAB that connects the transparent electrode layers to the video driver board of an LCD. TAB is one of several methods employed in the LCD-manufacturing process to electrically connect hundreds of signal paths going to the rows and columns of electrodes in layer 6 (the transparent electrode layer) in the LCD to the video ICs on the driver board that drives these electrodes.

[ "Pixel", "Signal", "Image (mathematics)" ]
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