Mini-LED local dimming systems commonly suffer from luminance discontinuity, halo artifacts, and temporal instability in dynamic scenes. Traditional heuristic-based methods and standard convolutional neural networks often fail to capture long-range spatial dependencies and struggle to balance spatial smoothness, content fidelity, and real-time performance under hardware constraints. To address these challenges, this paper proposes SwinLightNet, an efficient adaptive backlight optimization network tailored for Mini-LED displays. Built upon a Swin Transformer framework tailored for Mini-LED backlight optimization, SwinLightNet integrates five hardware-aware design strategies: (i) a lightweight Swin variant (window size = 8, MLP ratio = 2.0) for efficient global context modeling; (ii) CNN encoder–decoder integration for multi-scale feature extraction; (iii) a partition-level alignment module ensuring spatial consistency; (iv) a backlight constraint module enforcing local luminance consistency and contrast preservation; (v) a change-aware temporal decision framework stabilizing dynamic sequences. These components synergistically resolve core limitations: global modeling suppresses halo artifacts while preserving content fidelity; alignment and constraint modules eliminate luminance discontinuity without compromising contrast; and the temporal framework guarantees flicker-free output under motion. Evaluated on DIV2K (static images) and a custom 2K-resolution video dataset (dynamic scenes), SwinLightNet demonstrates robust reconstruction quality while maintaining only 1.18 million parameters and 0.088 GFLOPs (Computational Cost). The results confirm SwinLightNet’s effectiveness in holistically addressing spatial, temporal, and hardware constraints, demonstrating strong potential for practical deployment in resource-constrained Mini-LED backlight control systems.
Li et al. (Sun,) studied this question.