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OpenCV Computer Vision with Java

You're reading from   OpenCV Computer Vision with Java Create multiplatform computer vision desktop and web applications using the combination of OpenCV and Java

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Product type Paperback
Published in Jul 2015
Publisher
ISBN-13 9781783283972
Length 174 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Author (1):
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Daniel Lelis Baggio Daniel Lelis Baggio
Author Profile Icon Daniel Lelis Baggio
Daniel Lelis Baggio
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Table of Contents (9) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Setting Up OpenCV for Java FREE CHAPTER 2. Handling Matrices, Files, Cameras, and GUIs 3. Image Filters and Morphological Operators 4. Image Transforms 5. Object Detection Using Ada Boost and Haar Cascades 6. Detecting Foreground and Background Regions and Depth with a Kinect Device 7. OpenCV on the Server Side Index

Integral images


Some face recognition algorithms, such as OpenCV's face detection algorithm make heavy use of features like the ones shown in the following image:

These are the so-called Haar-like features and they are calculated as the sum of pixels in the white area minus the sum of pixels in the black area. You might find this type of a feature kind of odd, but when training it for face detection, it can be built to be an extremely powerful classifier using only two of these features, as depicted in the following image:

In fact, a classifier that uses only the two preceding features can be adjusted to detect 100 percent of a given face training database with only 40 percent of false positives. Taking out the sum of all pixels in an image as well as calculating the sum of each area can be a long process. However, this process must be tested for each frame in a given input image, hence calculating these features fast is a requirement that we need to fulfill.

First, let's define an integral...

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