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Modern Computer Vision with PyTorch

You're reading from   Modern Computer Vision with PyTorch A practical roadmap from deep learning fundamentals to advanced applications and Generative AI

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Product type Paperback
Published in Jun 2024
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781803231334
Length 746 pages
Edition 2nd Edition
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Authors (2):
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V Kishore Ayyadevara V Kishore Ayyadevara
Author Profile Icon V Kishore Ayyadevara
V Kishore Ayyadevara
Yeshwanth Reddy Yeshwanth Reddy
Author Profile Icon Yeshwanth Reddy
Yeshwanth Reddy
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Toc

Table of Contents (26) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Section 1: Fundamentals of Deep Learning for Computer Vision
2. Artificial Neural Network Fundamentals FREE CHAPTER 3. PyTorch Fundamentals 4. Building a Deep Neural Network with PyTorch 5. Section 2: Object Classification and Detection
6. Introducing Convolutional Neural Networks 7. Transfer Learning for Image Classification 8. Practical Aspects of Image Classification 9. Basics of Object Detection 10. Advanced Object Detection 11. Image Segmentation 12. Applications of Object Detection and Segmentation 13. Section 3: Image Manipulation
14. Autoencoders and Image Manipulation 15. Image Generation Using GANs 16. Advanced GANs to Manipulate Images 17. Section 4: Combining Computer Vision with Other Techniques
18. Combining Computer Vision and Reinforcement Learning 19. Combining Computer Vision and NLP Techniques 20. Foundation Models in Computer Vision 21. Applications of Stable Diffusion 22. Moving a Model to Production 23. Other Books You May Enjoy
24. Index
Appendix

Implementing facial keypoint detection

So far, we have learned about predicting classes that are binary (cats versus dogs) or are multi-label (Fashion-MNIST). Let’s now learn a regression problem and, in so doing, a task where we are predicting not one but several continuous outputs (and hence a multi-regression learning).

Imagine a scenario where you are asked to predict the keypoints present on an image of a face; for example, the location of the eyes, nose, and chin. In this scenario, we need to employ a new strategy to build a model to detect the keypoints.

Before we dive further, let’s understand what we are trying to achieve through the following image:

Figure 5.8: (Left) Input image; (Right) Input image overlaid with facial keypoints

As you can observe in the preceding image, facial keypoints denote the markings of various keypoints on an image that contains a face.

To solve this problem, we would first have to solve a few other problems...

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