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  2. OpenCV - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/OpenCV

    OpenCV (Open Source Computer Vision Library) is a library of programming functions mainly for real-time computer vision. [2] Originally developed by Intel, it was later supported by Willow Garage, then Itseez (which was later acquired by Intel [3]). The library is cross-platform and licensed as free and open-source software under Apache License ...

  3. Gary Bradski - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gary_Bradski

    Gary Bradski is an American scientist, engineer, entrepreneur, and author. He co-founded Industrial Perception, a company that developed perception applications for industrial robotic application (since acquired by Google in 2012 [2]) and has worked on the OpenCV Computer Vision library, as well as published a book on that library.

  4. List of programming languages for artificial intelligence

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_programming...

    Hugging Face's transformers library can manipulate large language models. [4] Jupyter Notebooks can execute cells of Python code, retaining the context between the execution of cells, which usually facilitates interactive data exploration. [5] Elixir is a high-level functional programming language based on the Erlang VM. Its machine-learning ...

  5. Computer vision - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Computer_vision

    Computer vision is an interdisciplinary field that deals with how computers can be made to gain high-level understanding from digital images or videos.From the perspective of engineering, it seeks to automate tasks that the human visual system can do.

  6. Local binary patterns - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Local_binary_patterns

    VLFeat, an open source computer vision library in C (with bindings to multiple languages including MATLAB) has an implementation. LBPLibrary is a collection of eleven Local Binary Patterns (LBP) algorithms developed for background subtraction problem. The algorithms were implemented in C++ based on OpenCV.

  7. Category:Learning in computer vision - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:Learning_in...

    Such data is often fed into a machine learning algorithm, that will learn to predict such labels given novel images or video. Learning-based methods have been used for a variety of computer vision tasks, including low-level problems such as image-denoising, and high-level tasks such as object recognition and scene classification.

  8. One-shot learning (computer vision) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/One-shot_learning...

    One-shot learning is an object categorization problem, found mostly in computer vision. Whereas most machine learning -based object categorization algorithms require training on hundreds or thousands of examples, one-shot learning aims to classify objects from one, or only a few, examples.

  9. Computer Vision Annotation Tool - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Computer_Vision_Annotation...

    Computer Vision Annotation Tool (CVAT) is a free, open source, web-based image and video annotation tool used for labeling data for computer vision algorithms. Originally developed by Intel , CVAT is designed for use by a professional data annotation team, with a user interface optimized for computer vision annotation tasks.