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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
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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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Applying directional filters to detect edges


The first recipe of this chapter introduced the idea of linear filtering using kernel matrices. The filters that were used had the effect of blurring an image by removing or attenuating its high-frequency components. In this recipe, we will perform the opposite transformation, that is, amplifying the high-frequency content of an image. As a result, the high-pass filters introduced here will perform edge detection.

How to do it...

The filter that we will use here is called the Sobel filter. It is said to be a directional filter, because it only affects the vertical or the horizontal image frequencies depending on which kernel of the filter is used. OpenCV has a function that applies the Sobel operator on an image. The horizontal filter is called as follows:

  cv::Sobel(image,    // input
           sobelX,    // output
           CV_8U,     // image type
           1, 0,      // kernel specification
           3,         // size of the square kernel...
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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