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Mastering OpenCV 3

You're reading from   Mastering OpenCV 3 Get hands-on with practical Computer Vision using OpenCV 3

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Product type Paperback
Published in Apr 2017
Publisher
ISBN-13 9781786467171
Length 250 pages
Edition 2nd Edition
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Authors (6):
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Shervin Emami Shervin Emami
Author Profile Icon Shervin Emami
Shervin Emami
David Millán Escrivá David Millán Escrivá
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David Millán Escrivá
Eugene Khvedchenia Eugene Khvedchenia
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Eugene Khvedchenia
Daniel Lelis Baggio Daniel Lelis Baggio
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Daniel Lelis Baggio
Roy Shilkrot Roy Shilkrot
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Roy Shilkrot
Jason Saragih Jason Saragih
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Jason Saragih
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Toc

Geometrical constraints


In face tracking, geometry refers to the spatial configuration of a predefined set of points that correspond to physically consistent locations on the human face (such as eye corners, nose tips, and eyebrow edges). A particular choice of these points is application dependent, with some applications requiring a dense set of over 100 points and others requiring only a sparser selection. However, the robustness of face-tracking algorithms generally improves with an increased number of points, as their separate measurements can reinforce each other through their relative spatial dependencies. For example, the location of an eye corner is a good indication of where to expect the nose to be located. However, there are limits to improvements in robustness gained by increasing the number of points, where performance typically plateaus after around 100 points. Furthermore, increasing the point set used to describe a face carries with it a linear increase in computational complexity...

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