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You're reading from  OpenCV Computer Vision Application Programming Cookbook Second Edition

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Published inAug 2014
Reading LevelBeginner
PublisherPackt
ISBN-139781782161486
Edition1st Edition
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Robert Laganiere
Robert Laganiere
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Robert Laganiere

Robert Laganiere is a professor at the School of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science of the University of Ottawa, Canada. He is also a faculty member of the VIVA research lab and is the co-author of several scientific publications and patents in content based video analysis, visual surveillance, driver-assistance, object detection, and tracking. Robert authored the OpenCV2 Computer Vision Application Programming Cookbook in 2011 and co-authored Object Oriented Software Development published by McGraw Hill in 2001. He co-founded Visual Cortek in 2006, an Ottawa-based video analytics start-up that was later acquired by iwatchlife.com in 2009. He is also a consultant in computer vision and has assumed the role of Chief Scientist in a number of start-up companies such as Cognivue Corp, iWatchlife, and Tempo Analytics. Robert has a Bachelor of Electrical Engineering degree from Ecole Polytechnique in Montreal (1987) and MSc and PhD degrees from INRS-Telecommunications, Montreal (1996). You can visit the author's website at laganiere.name.
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Tracking feature points in a video


This chapter is about reading, writing, and processing video sequences. The objective is to be able to analyze a complete video sequence. As an example, in this recipe, you will learn how to perform temporal analysis of the sequence in order to track feature points as they move from frame to frame.

How to do it...

To start the tracking process, the first thing to do is to detect the feature points in an initial frame. You then try to track these points in the next frame. Obviously, since we are dealing with a video sequence, there is a good chance that the object on which the feature points are found has moved (this motion can also be due to camera movement). Therefore, you must search around a point's previous location in order to find its new location in the next frame. This is what accomplishes the cv::calcOpticalFlowPyrLK function. You input two consecutive frames and a vector of feature points in the first image; the function returns a vector of new...

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OpenCV Computer Vision Application Programming Cookbook Second Edition
Published in: Aug 2014Publisher: PacktISBN-13: 9781782161486

Author (1)

author image
Robert Laganiere

Robert Laganiere is a professor at the School of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science of the University of Ottawa, Canada. He is also a faculty member of the VIVA research lab and is the co-author of several scientific publications and patents in content based video analysis, visual surveillance, driver-assistance, object detection, and tracking. Robert authored the OpenCV2 Computer Vision Application Programming Cookbook in 2011 and co-authored Object Oriented Software Development published by McGraw Hill in 2001. He co-founded Visual Cortek in 2006, an Ottawa-based video analytics start-up that was later acquired by iwatchlife.com in 2009. He is also a consultant in computer vision and has assumed the role of Chief Scientist in a number of start-up companies such as Cognivue Corp, iWatchlife, and Tempo Analytics. Robert has a Bachelor of Electrical Engineering degree from Ecole Polytechnique in Montreal (1987) and MSc and PhD degrees from INRS-Telecommunications, Montreal (1996). You can visit the author's website at laganiere.name.
Read more about Robert Laganiere