In this paper, we consider a dual-mode process for the electrophotographic laser printer--a low-frequency halftoning for smooth regions and a high-frequency halftoning for detail regions. These regions are described by an object map that is extracted from the page description language version of the document. This manner of switching screens depending on the local content provides a stable halftone without artifacts in smooth areas and preserves the detail rendering in detail or texture areas. However, when switching between halftones with two different frequencies, jaggies may occur along the boundaries between areas halftoned with low- and high-frequency screens. To reduce the jaggies, our screens obey a harmonic relationship. In addition, we implement a blending process based on a transition region. We propose a nonlinear blending process in which at each pixel, we choose the maximum of the two weighted halftones, where the weights vary according to the position in the transition region. Moreover, we describe an online tone-mapping for the boundary blending process, based on an offline calibration procedure that effectively assures the desired tone values within the transition region.
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