Originally Posted By oakvillematt

No, I am referring to the exact same thing. And, BTW, you can get the exact same effect on a plasma screen that is not configured correctly.

If you look at the technology behind the LCD pannel, the issue is that you are bending or deforming a liquid crystal to block a back light from coming through with a whole series of colour filters in front. There was a lag time in the crystals ability to block and then open back up to let light through. as this was greater than
your eyes ability to perceive the change in each frame so you got ghosting on fast moving objects. This is different than blur. To get around this the TV would interpolate extra frames into the picture so that the in-between frames could be used to faster drive each pixel to the right state so that ghosting was eliminated. The sad side effect of this was it gave the effect of over sharpening the images and add too much perceived detail where there wasn't really any.

You can get the same effect if you over light a scene and add too much sharpness like they do in soap opera's.

But to say it's just in LCD screens is a bit of a hoax as many of the Plasma tv's started to add in oversample to take a 30fps (60hz) on up the refresh rate to 300fps (600hz) as a marketing ploy to have something on paper to say plasma is better than LCD that was claiming their 120hz and 240hz. Turn up the brightness on the plasma and it looked like a soap opera too.

Sorry Matt but your explanation regarding brightness doesn't jive with any article i've read. The soap opera effect is related to refresh rates and frames per second.

This processing was designed to reduce motion blur and was introduced with some plasma tvs as well so they could market a high refresh rate similar to the LCDs. If you want to call the artifact ghosting, go ahead. Every other article i've read including this one refers to it as motion blur.
Tomato tomatoe perhaps.

http://www.cnet.com/news/what-is-the-soap-opera-effect/
http://www.wired.com/2014/08/wtf-just-happened-soap-opera-effect/
http://www.rtings.com/tv/reviews/by-test-results/motion-interpolation-soap-opera-effect
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Motion_interpolation


"Those who preach the myths of audio are ignorant of truth."