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OpenCV 3.x with Python By Example - Second Edition

You're reading from  OpenCV 3.x with Python By Example - Second Edition

Product type Book
Published in Jan 2018
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781788396905
Pages 268 pages
Edition 2nd Edition
Languages
Authors (2):
Gabriel Garrido Calvo Gabriel Garrido Calvo
Profile icon Gabriel Garrido Calvo
Prateek Joshi Prateek Joshi
Profile icon Prateek Joshi
View More author details
Toc

Table of Contents (17) Chapters close

Title Page
Copyright and Credits
Contributors
Packt Upsell
Preface
1. Applying Geometric Transformations to Images 2. Detecting Edges and Applying Image Filters 3. Cartoonizing an Image 4. Detecting and Tracking Different Body Parts 5. Extracting Features from an Image 6. Seam Carving 7. Detecting Shapes and Segmenting an Image 8. Object Tracking 9. Object Recognition 10. Augmented Reality 11. Machine Learning by an Artificial Neural Network 1. Other Books You May Enjoy

Detecting the corners


Since we know that the corners are interesting, let's see how we can detect them. In computer vision, there is a popular corner detection technique called the Harris Corner Detector. We basically construct a 2x2 matrix based on partial derivatives of the grayscale image, and then analyze the eigenvalues obtained. Eigenvalues are a special set of scalars associated with a linear system of equations that provide segmented information about the image by a cluster of pixels that belong together. In this case, we use them to detect the corners. This is actually an oversimplification of the actual algorithm, but it covers the gist. So, if you want to understand the underlying mathematical details, you can look into the original paper by Harris and Stephens at http://www.bmva.org/bmvc/1988/avc-88-023.pdf. A corner point is a point where both the eigenvalues would have large values.

Let's consider the following image:

If you run the Harris Corner Detector on this image, you will...

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