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  2. DeepFace - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/DeepFace

    DeepFace is a deep learning facial recognition system created by a research group at Facebook.It identifies human faces in digital images. The program employs a nine-layer neural network with over 120 million connection weights and was trained on four million images uploaded by Facebook users.

  3. FaceNet - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/FaceNet

    The system was first presented at the 2015 IEEE Conference on Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition. [1] The system uses a deep convolutional neural network to learn a mapping (also called an embedding) from a set of face images to a 128-dimensional Euclidean space, and assesses the similarity between faces based on the square of the ...

  4. Landmark detection - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Landmark_detection

    Finding facial landmarks is an important step in facial identification of people in an image. Facial landmarks can also be used to extract information about mood and intention of the person. [ 1 ] Methods used fall in to three categories: holistic methods, constrained local model methods, and regression -based methods.

  5. Face detection - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Face_detection

    Face detection is gaining the interest of marketers. A webcam can be integrated into a television and detect any face that walks by. The system then calculates the race, gender, and age range of the face. Once the information is collected, a series of advertisements can be played that is specific toward the detected race/gender/age.

  6. Facial recognition system - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Facial_recognition_system

    DeepFace is a deep learning facial recognition system created by a research group at Facebook. It identifies human faces in digital images. It employs a nine-layer neural net with over 120 million connection weights, and was trained on four million images uploaded by Facebook users.

  7. Viola–Jones object detection framework - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Viola–Jones_object...

    The Viola–Jones object detection framework is a machine learning object detection framework proposed in 2001 by Paul Viola and Michael Jones. [1] [2] It was motivated primarily by the problem of face detection, although it can be adapted to the detection of other object classes. In short, it consists of a sequence of classifiers.

  8. Object detection - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Object_detection

    Objects detected with OpenCV's Deep Neural Network module (dnn) by using a YOLOv3 model trained on COCO dataset capable to detect objects of 80 common classes. Object detection is a computer technology related to computer vision and image processing that deals with detecting instances of semantic objects of a certain class (such as humans, buildings, or cars) in digital images and videos. [1]

  9. Cascading classifiers - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cascading_classifiers

    Cascading is a particular case of ensemble learning based on the concatenation of several classifiers, using all information collected from the output from a given classifier as additional information for the next classifier in the cascade. Unlike voting or stacking ensembles, which are multiexpert systems, cascading is a multistage one.