0% found this document useful (0 votes)
52 views1 page

Assignment No. 1 - FCV

1) The document outlines an assignment in computer vision fundamentals due April 30th. It provides instructions on installing required software, completing tasks to test installations, and detect edges using various OpenCV functions. 2) Students are instructed to load an image, convert it to grayscale, and print pixel values. They then convert the grayscale image to binary and print both original and grayscale images. 3) Tasks involve using OpenCV functions like filter2D, Gaussian blur, gradients, gradient magnitude, Sobel, and Canny edge detectors to find edges in an input image.

Uploaded by

Muhammad Bilal
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
0% found this document useful (0 votes)
52 views1 page

Assignment No. 1 - FCV

1) The document outlines an assignment in computer vision fundamentals due April 30th. It provides instructions on installing required software, completing tasks to test installations, and detect edges using various OpenCV functions. 2) Students are instructed to load an image, convert it to grayscale, and print pixel values. They then convert the grayscale image to binary and print both original and grayscale images. 3) Tasks involve using OpenCV functions like filter2D, Gaussian blur, gradients, gradient magnitude, Sobel, and Canny edge detectors to find edges in an input image.

Uploaded by

Muhammad Bilal
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
You are on page 1/ 1

DR. M.

AHMAD 1

Assignment No. 1 – 4 Points


Fundamentals of Computer Vision – Deadline Before or on April 30, 2023

I. T HUMBNAILS /RULE / DON ’ T


1) Cheat/copy/plagiarized material
2) Uncited use of any material from anywhere
3) Share/steal any material with/from former or current students
4) Penalties:
• Zero marks for first sharing infringement (both parties)
• Exclusion from the course for second sharing infringement (both parties).

II. Q UESTION N O . 1
1) Download and install Python/Anaconda.
2) Configure OpenCV with jupyter notebook. No other IDE is allowed.
3) Install the required libraries and run a simple program for loading and displaying a color image to
test your installation.
III. Q UESTION N O . 2
Use color.2.Convert the color image into a binary image. Print the pixel values of the grayscale image
and finally convert the grayscale image into the binary image and print both the original color and grayscale
image.
IV. Q UESTION N O . 3
Test the following OpenCV built-in functions for edge detection on your loaded image. Make individual
blocks for each of the following functions and print the actual image along with the detected images.
1) filter2D: The OpenCV function filter2D to create your own linear filters. filter2D(src, dst, ddepth ,
kernel, anchor, delta, BORDER DEFAULT)
2) Gaussian filter: Probably the most useful filter (although not the fastest). Gaussian filtering is done
by convolving each point in the input array with a Gaussian kernel and then summing them all to
produce the output array. GaussianBlur( src, dst, Size( i, i ), 0, 0)
3) Gradient X and gradient Y: Gradient is the partial derivative (a derivative of multiple variables).
We can derivate the image row-wise (in x) Ix and column-wise (in y) Iy .
4) Gradient magnitude: Magnitude shows the intensity of the change that ranges from low to high.
Later we can decide on the magnitude value to keep the pixel as edge or non-edge.
5) Sobel: The Soble and Prewitt are the sample edge detector. We can use the straight-away function
provided by OpenCV to get Sobel edges.
6) Canny: The most popular edge detector. The OpenCV also provides a built-in function for the
Canny edge detector.
V. Q UESTION N O . 4
Finally, implement the Edge detector in Jupyter notebook by yourself using the following steps.
• Get the image and convert it into gray-scale.
• Build the Gaussian filter from the filter2D function and apply it to the image.
• Apply the x-derivative (gradient) and y-derivative (gradient)
• Compute the gradient magnitude
• Threshold the final image.
• Finally, implement Laplacian of Gaussian (LoG) for comparison.

You might also like