Cascade Classification ====================== .. highlight:: python Haar Feature-based Cascade Classifier for Object Detection ---------------------------------------------------------- The object detector described below has been initially proposed by Paul Viola :ref:`Viola01` and improved by Rainer Lienhart :ref:`Lienhart02` . First, a classifier (namely a *cascade of boosted classifiers working with haar-like features* ) is trained with a few hundred sample views of a particular object (i.e., a face or a car), called positive examples, that are scaled to the same size (say, 20x20), and negative examples - arbitrary images of the same size. After a classifier is trained, it can be applied to a region of interest (of the same size as used during the training) in an input image. The classifier outputs a "1" if the region is likely to show the object (i.e., face/car), and "0" otherwise. To search for the object in the whole image one can move the search window across the image and check every location using the classifier. The classifier is designed so that it can be easily "resized" in order to be able to find the objects of interest at different sizes, which is more efficient than resizing the image itself. So, to find an object of an unknown size in the image the scan procedure should be done several times at different scales. The word "cascade" in the classifier name means that the resultant classifier consists of several simpler classifiers ( *stages* ) that are applied subsequently to a region of interest until at some stage the candidate is rejected or all the stages are passed. The word "boosted" means that the classifiers at every stage of the cascade are complex themselves and they are built out of basic classifiers using one of four different ``boosting`` techniques (weighted voting). Currently Discrete Adaboost, Real Adaboost, Gentle Adaboost and Logitboost are supported. The basic classifiers are decision-tree classifiers with at least 2 leaves. Haar-like features are the input to the basic classifers, and are calculated as described below. The current algorithm uses the following Haar-like features: The feature used in a particular classifier is specified by its shape (1a, 2b etc.), position within the region of interest and the scale (this scale is not the same as the scale used at the detection stage, though these two scales are multiplied). For example, in the case of the third line feature (2c) the response is calculated as the difference between the sum of image pixels under the rectangle covering the whole feature (including the two white stripes and the black stripe in the middle) and the sum of the image pixels under the black stripe multiplied by 3 in order to compensate for the differences in the size of areas. The sums of pixel values over a rectangular regions are calculated rapidly using integral images (see below and the :ref:`Integral` description). A simple demonstration of face detection, which draws a rectangle around each detected face: :: hc = cv.Load("haarcascade_frontalface_default.xml") img = cv.LoadImage("faces.jpg", 0) faces = cv.HaarDetectObjects(img, hc, cv.CreateMemStorage()) for (x,y,w,h),n in faces: cv.Rectangle(img, (x,y), (x+w,y+h), 255) cv.SaveImage("faces_detected.jpg", img) .. .. index:: HaarDetectObjects .. _HaarDetectObjects: HaarDetectObjects ----------------- .. function:: HaarDetectObjects(image,cascade,storage,scaleFactor=1.1,minNeighbors=3,flags=0,minSize=(0,0))-> detected_objects Detects objects in the image. :param image: Image to detect objects in :type image: :class:`CvArr` :param cascade: Haar classifier cascade in internal representation :type cascade: :class:`CvHaarClassifierCascade` :param storage: Memory storage to store the resultant sequence of the object candidate rectangles :type storage: :class:`CvMemStorage` :param scaleFactor: The factor by which the search window is scaled between the subsequent scans, 1.1 means increasing window by 10 % :param minNeighbors: Minimum number (minus 1) of neighbor rectangles that makes up an object. All the groups of a smaller number of rectangles than ``min_neighbors`` -1 are rejected. If ``minNeighbors`` is 0, the function does not any grouping at all and returns all the detected candidate rectangles, which may be useful if the user wants to apply a customized grouping procedure :param flags: Mode of operation. Currently the only flag that may be specified is ``CV_HAAR_DO_CANNY_PRUNING`` . If it is set, the function uses Canny edge detector to reject some image regions that contain too few or too much edges and thus can not contain the searched object. The particular threshold values are tuned for face detection and in this case the pruning speeds up the processing :type flags: int :param minSize: Minimum window size. By default, it is set to the size of samples the classifier has been trained on ( :math:`\sim 20\times 20` for face detection) :param maxSize: Maximum window size to use. By default, it is set to the size of the image. The function finds rectangular regions in the given image that are likely to contain objects the cascade has been trained for and returns those regions as a sequence of rectangles. The function scans the image several times at different scales (see :ref:`SetImagesForHaarClassifierCascade` ). Each time it considers overlapping regions in the image and applies the classifiers to the regions using :ref:`RunHaarClassifierCascade` . It may also apply some heuristics to reduce number of analyzed regions, such as Canny prunning. After it has proceeded and collected the candidate rectangles (regions that passed the classifier cascade), it groups them and returns a sequence of average rectangles for each large enough group. The default parameters ( ``scale_factor`` =1.1, ``min_neighbors`` =3, ``flags`` =0) are tuned for accurate yet slow object detection. For a faster operation on real video images the settings are: ``scale_factor`` =1.2, ``min_neighbors`` =2, ``flags`` = ``CV_HAAR_DO_CANNY_PRUNING`` , ``min_size`` = *minimum possible face size* (for example, :math:`\sim` 1/4 to 1/16 of the image area in the case of video conferencing). The function returns a list of tuples, ``(rect, neighbors)`` , where rect is a :ref:`CvRect` specifying the object's extents and neighbors is a number of neighbors. .. doctest:: >>> import cv >>> image = cv.LoadImageM("lena.jpg", cv.CV_LOAD_IMAGE_GRAYSCALE) >>> cascade = cv.Load("../../data/haarcascades/haarcascade_frontalface_alt.xml") >>> print cv.HaarDetectObjects(image, cascade, cv.CreateMemStorage(0), 1.2, 2, 0, (20, 20)) [((217, 203, 169, 169), 24)] ..