Book Image

Learning OpenCV 5 Computer Vision with Python, Fourth Edition - Fourth Edition

By : Joseph Howse, Joe Minichino
5 (2)
Book Image

Learning OpenCV 5 Computer Vision with Python, Fourth Edition - Fourth Edition

5 (2)
By: Joseph Howse, Joe Minichino

Overview of this book

Computer vision is a rapidly evolving science in the field of artificial intelligence, encompassing diverse use cases and techniques. This book will not only help those who are getting started with computer vision but also experts in the domain. You'll be able to put theory into practice by building apps with OpenCV 5 and Python 3. You'll start by setting up OpenCV 5 with Python 3 on various platforms. Next, you'll learn how to perform basic operations such as reading, writing, manipulating, and displaying images, videos, and camera feeds. From taking you through image processing, video analysis, depth estimation, and segmentation, to helping you gain practice by building a GUI app, this book ensures you'll have opportunities for hands-on activities. You'll tackle two popular challenges: face detection and face recognition. You'll also learn about object classification and machine learning, which will enable you to create and use object detectors and even track moving objects in real time. Later, you'll develop your skills in augmented reality and real-world 3D navigation. Finally, you'll cover ANNs and DNNs, learning how to develop apps for recognizing handwritten digits and classifying a person's gender and age, and you'll deploy your solutions to the Cloud. By the end of this book, you'll have the skills you need to execute real-world computer vision projects.
Table of Contents (12 chapters)
Free Chapter
1
Learning OpenCV 5 Computer Vision with Python, Fourth Edition: Tackle tools, techniques, and algorithms for computer vision and machine learning
Appendix A: Bending Color Space with the Curves Filter

Tracking colorful objects using MeanShift and CamShift

We have seen that background subtraction can be an effective technique for detecting moving objects; however, we know that it has some inherent limitations. Notably, it assumes that the current background can be predicted based on past frames. This assumption is fragile. For example, if the camera moves, the entire background model could suddenly become outdated. Thus, in a robust tracking system, it is important to build some kind of model of foreground objects rather than just the background.

We saw various ways of detecting objects in Chapter 5, Detecting and Recognizing Faces, Chapter 6, Retrieving Images and Searching Using Image Descriptors, and Chapter 7, Building Custom Object Detectors. For object detection, we favored algorithms that could deal with a lot of variation within a class of objects, so that our car detector was not too particular about what shape or color of car it would detect. For object tracking, our needs...