Course pages 2018–19
Computer Vision
Principal lecturer: Prof John Daugman
Taken by: Part II CST 50%, Part II CST 75%
Past exam questions
No. of lectures: 16
In lieu of supervisions, exercises will be set and reviewed in two Examples Classes.
Aims
The aims of this course are to introduce the principles, models and applications of computer vision, as well as some mechanisms used in biological visual systems that may inspire design of artificial ones. The course will cover: image formation, structure, and coding; edge and feature detection; neural operators for image analysis; texture, colour, stereo, and motion; wavelet methods for visual coding and analysis; interpretation of surfaces, solids, and shapes; probabilistic classifiers; visual inference, recognition, and learning.
Lectures
- Goals of computer vision; why they are so difficult.
Image formation, and the ill-posed problem of making 3D
inferences about objects and their properties from images.
- Image sensing, pixel arrays, CCD and CMOS cameras.
Image coding and information measures. Elementary operations on image arrays.
- Biological visual mechanisms, from retina to cortex.
Photoreceptor sampling; receptive field profiles; stochastic impulse
codes; channels and pathways. Neural image encoding operators.
- Mathematical operations for extracting image structure.
Finite differences and directional derivatives.
Filters; convolution; correlation. 2D Fourier domain theorems.
- Edge detection operators; the information revealed by edges.
Gradient vector field; Laplacian operator and its zero-crossings.
- Multi-scale contours, feature detection and matching.
SIFT (scale-invariant feature transform); pyramids. 2D wavelets as
visual primitives. Active contours. Energy-minimising snakes.
- Higher visual operations in brain cortical areas.
Multiple parallel mappings; streaming and divisions of labour;
reciprocal feedback through the visual system.
- Texture, colour, stereo, and motion descriptors.
Disambiguation and the achievement of invariances.
Colour computation, motion and image segmentation.
- Lambertian and specular surfaces; reflectance maps.
Geometric analysis of image formation from surfaces. Discounting the
illuminant when inferring 3D structure and surface properties.
- Shape representation. Inferring 3D shape from shading;
surface geometry. Boundary descriptors; codons. Object-centred
volumetric coordinates.
- Perceptual organisation and cognition. Vision
as model-building and graphics in the brain. Learning to see.
- Lessons from neurological trauma and visual deficits.
Visual agnosias and illusions, and what they may imply about how vision works.
- Bayesian inference in vision; knowledge-driven interpretations.
Classifiers, decision-making, and pattern recognition.
- Model estimation. Machine learning and statistical methods
in vision.
- Applications of machine learning in computer vision.
Discriminative and generative methods. Content based image retrieval.
- Approaches to face detection, face recognition, and facial
interpretation. Cascaded detectors. Appearance versus model-based
methods.
Objectives
At the end of the course students should
- understand visual processing from both “bottom-up” (data oriented) and
“top-down” (goals oriented) perspectives;
- be able to decompose visual tasks into sequences of image analysis
operations, representations, specific algorithms, and inference principles;
- understand the roles of image transformations and their invariances
in pattern recognition and classification;
- be able to describe and contrast techniques for extracting and representing
features, edges, shapes, and textures;
- be able to describe key aspects of how biological visual systems work;
and be able to think of ways in which biological visual strategies might be
implemented in machine vision, despite the enormous differences in hardware;
- be able to analyse the robustness, brittleness, generalizability,
and performance of different approaches in computer vision;
- understand the roles of machine learning in computer vision today,
including probabilistic inference, discriminative and generative methods;
- understand in depth at least one major practical application problem,
such as face recognition, detection, or interpretation.
Recommended reading
* Forsyth, D. A. & Ponce, J. (2003). Computer Vision: A Modern Approach. Prentice Hall.
Shapiro, L. & Stockman, G. (2001). Computer vision. Prentice Hall.