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Machine Learning for OpenCV 4

You're reading from   Machine Learning for OpenCV 4 Intelligent algorithms for building image processing apps using OpenCV 4, Python, and scikit-learn

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Product type Paperback
Published in Sep 2019
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781789536300
Length 420 pages
Edition 2nd Edition
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Authors (4):
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Aditya Sharma Aditya Sharma
Author Profile Icon Aditya Sharma
Aditya Sharma
Michael Beyeler (USD) Michael Beyeler (USD)
Author Profile Icon Michael Beyeler (USD)
Michael Beyeler (USD)
Vishwesh Ravi Shrimali Vishwesh Ravi Shrimali
Author Profile Icon Vishwesh Ravi Shrimali
Vishwesh Ravi Shrimali
Michael Beyeler Michael Beyeler
Author Profile Icon Michael Beyeler
Michael Beyeler
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Table of Contents (18) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Section 1: Fundamentals of Machine Learning and OpenCV FREE CHAPTER
2. A Taste of Machine Learning 3. Working with Data in OpenCV 4. First Steps in Supervised Learning 5. Representing Data and Engineering Features 6. Section 2: Operations with OpenCV
7. Using Decision Trees to Make a Medical Diagnosis 8. Detecting Pedestrians with Support Vector Machines 9. Implementing a Spam Filter with Bayesian Learning 10. Discovering Hidden Structures with Unsupervised Learning 11. Section 3: Advanced Machine Learning with OpenCV
12. Using Deep Learning to Classify Handwritten Digits 13. Ensemble Methods for Classification 14. Selecting the Right Model with Hyperparameter Tuning 15. Using OpenVINO with OpenCV 16. Conclusion 17. Other Books You May Enjoy

Detecting Pedestrians with Support Vector Machines

In the previous chapter, we talked about how to use decision trees for classification and regression. In this chapter, we want to direct our attention to another well-established supervised learner in the machine learning world: support vector machines (SVMs). Soon after their introduction in early 1990, SVMs quickly became popular in the machine learning community, largely because of their success in early handwritten digit classification. They remain relevant to this day, especially in application domains, such as computer vision.

The goal of this chapter is to apply SVMs to a popular problem in computer vision: pedestrian detection. In contrast to a recognition task (where we name the category of an object), the goal of a detection task is to say whether a particular object (or in our case, a pedestrian) is present in an image...

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