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Mastering OpenCV with Practical Computer Vision Projects

You're reading from   Mastering OpenCV with Practical Computer Vision Projects This is the definitive advanced tutorial for OpenCV, designed for those with basic C++ skills. The computer vision projects are divided into easily assimilated chapters with an emphasis on practical involvement for an easier learning curve.

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Product type Paperback
Published in Dec 2012
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781849517829
Length 340 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Table of Contents (15) Chapters Close

Mastering OpenCV with Practical Computer Vision Projects
Credits
About the Authors
About the Reviewers
www.PacktPub.com
Preface
1. Cartoonifier and Skin Changer for Android FREE CHAPTER 2. Marker-based Augmented Reality on iPhone or iPad 3. Marker-less Augmented Reality 4. Exploring Structure from Motion Using OpenCV 5. Number Plate Recognition Using SVM and Neural Networks 6. Non-rigid Face Tracking 7. 3D Head Pose Estimation Using AAM and POSIT 8. Face Recognition using Eigenfaces or Fisherfaces Index

Chapter 6. Non-rigid Face Tracking

Non-rigid face tracking, which is the estimation of a quasi-dense set of facial features in each frame of a video stream, is a difficult problem for which modern approaches borrow ideas from a number of related fields, including computer vision, computational geometry, machine learning, and image processing. Non-rigidity here refers to the fact that relative distances between facial features vary between facial expression and across the population, and is distinct from face detection and tracking, which aims only to find the location of the face in each frame, rather than the configuration of facial features. Non-rigid face tracking is a popular research topic that has been pursued for over two decades, but it is only recently that various approaches have become robust enough, and processors fast enough, which makes the building of commercial applications possible.

Although commercial-grade face tracking can be highly sophisticated and pose a challenge even...

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