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A Practical Introduction to Computer Vision with OpenCV

ISBN: 978-1-118-84845-6

May 2014

240 pages

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Description

Computer Vision is a rapidly expanding area and it is becoming progressively easier for developers to make use of this field due to the ready availability of high quality libraries such as OpenCV3. This book discusses the theory behind basic computer vision and provides a bridge from the theory to practical implementation using the industry standard OpenCV libraries. It explains how to use the relevant OpenCV library routines and is accompanied by a full working program including the code snippets from the text. It is a heavily illustrated, practical introduction to an exciting field, the applications of which are becoming ubiquitous.

Key features:

  • Offers an introduction to computer vision, with enough theory to make clear how the various
     algorithms work but with an emphasis on practical programming issues.
  • Explains the basics of cameras and images and image processing to remove noise, before moving on to topics such as image histogramming; binary imaging; video processing to detect and model moving objects; geometric operations & camera models; edge detection; feature detection; and recognition in images.
  • Contains a large number of vision application problems to provide students with the opportunity to solve real problems. 
  • Includes a companion website hosting images and code from the book, as well as application problem videos and images which allow students to attempt to solve the problems presented in the book.
About the Author
Kenneth Dawson-Howe, School of Computer Science and Statistics, Trinity College Dublin, Ireland
Dr. Dawson-Howe is a Lecturer in the School of Computer Science and Statistics and part of the Graphics, Vision and Visualisation (GV2) Research Group at Trinity College Dublin. He currently teaches the course Computer Vision/Vision Systems to final year undergraduate and Masters students. He has been teaching courses in the area of computer vision for over 20 years. He is co-author of the Dictionary of Computer Vision & Image Processing published by Wiley in 2005 (2nd Edition to publish December 2013).