Book Image

Machine Learning for OpenCV 4 - Second Edition

By : Aditya Sharma, Vishwesh Ravi Shrimali, Michael Beyeler
Book Image

Machine Learning for OpenCV 4 - Second Edition

By: Aditya Sharma, Vishwesh Ravi Shrimali, Michael Beyeler

Overview of this book

OpenCV is an opensource library for building computer vision apps. The latest release, OpenCV 4, offers a plethora of features and platform improvements that are covered comprehensively in this up-to-date second edition. You'll start by understanding the new features and setting up OpenCV 4 to build your computer vision applications. You will explore the fundamentals of machine learning and even learn to design different algorithms that can be used for image processing. Gradually, the book will take you through supervised and unsupervised machine learning. You will gain hands-on experience using scikit-learn in Python for a variety of machine learning applications. Later chapters will focus on different machine learning algorithms, such as a decision tree, support vector machines (SVM), and Bayesian learning, and how they can be used for object detection computer vision operations. You will then delve into deep learning and ensemble learning, and discover their real-world applications, such as handwritten digit classification and gesture recognition. Finally, you’ll get to grips with the latest Intel OpenVINO for building an image processing system. By the end of this book, you will have developed the skills you need to use machine learning for building intelligent computer vision applications with OpenCV 4.
Table of Contents (18 chapters)
Free Chapter
1
Section 1: Fundamentals of Machine Learning and OpenCV
6
Section 2: Operations with OpenCV
11
Section 3: Advanced Machine Learning with OpenCV

Summary

In this chapter, we talked about machine learning at a high abstraction level: what it is, why it is important, and what kinds of problems it can solve. We learned that machine learning problems come in three flavors: supervised learning, unsupervised learning, and reinforcement learning. We talked about the prominence of supervised learning, and that this field can be further divided into two subfields: classification and regression. Classification models allow us to categorize objects into known classes (such as animals into cats and dogs), whereas regression analysis can be used to predict continuous outcomes of target variables (such as the sales price of used cars).

We also learned how to set up a data science environment using the Python Anaconda distribution, how to get the latest code of this book from GitHub, and how to run code in a Jupyter Notebook.

With these...