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237 lines
11 KiB
C++
237 lines
11 KiB
C++
// The contents of this file are in the public domain. See LICENSE_FOR_EXAMPLE_PROGRAMS.txt
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/*
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This example shows how to run a CNN based vehicle detector using dlib. The
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example loads a pretrained model and uses it to find the rear ends of cars in
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an image. We will also visualize some of the detector's processing steps by
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plotting various intermediate images on the screen. Viewing these can help
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you understand how the detector works.
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The model used by this example was trained by the dnn_mmod_train_find_cars_ex.cpp
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example. Also, since this is a CNN, you really should use a GPU to get the
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best execution speed. For instance, when run on a NVIDIA 1080ti, this detector
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runs at 98fps when run on the provided test image. That's more than an order
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of magnitude faster than when run on the CPU.
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Users who are just learning about dlib's deep learning API should read
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the dnn_introduction_ex.cpp and dnn_introduction2_ex.cpp examples to learn
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how the API works. For an introduction to the object detection method you
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should read dnn_mmod_ex.cpp.
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You can also see some videos of this vehicle detector running on YouTube:
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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4B3bzmxMAZU
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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bP2SUo5vSlc
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*/
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#include <iostream>
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#include <dlib/dnn.h>
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#include <dlib/image_io.h>
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#include <dlib/gui_widgets.h>
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#include <dlib/image_processing.h>
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using namespace std;
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using namespace dlib;
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// The rear view vehicle detector network
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template <long num_filters, typename SUBNET> using con5d = con<num_filters,5,5,2,2,SUBNET>;
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template <long num_filters, typename SUBNET> using con5 = con<num_filters,5,5,1,1,SUBNET>;
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template <typename SUBNET> using downsampler = relu<affine<con5d<32, relu<affine<con5d<32, relu<affine<con5d<16,SUBNET>>>>>>>>>;
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template <typename SUBNET> using rcon5 = relu<affine<con5<55,SUBNET>>>;
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using net_type = loss_mmod<con<1,9,9,1,1,rcon5<rcon5<rcon5<downsampler<input_rgb_image_pyramid<pyramid_down<6>>>>>>>>;
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// ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
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int main() try
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{
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net_type net;
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shape_predictor sp;
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// You can get this file from http://dlib.net/files/mmod_rear_end_vehicle_detector.dat.bz2
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// This network was produced by the dnn_mmod_train_find_cars_ex.cpp example program.
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// As you can see, the file also includes a separately trained shape_predictor. To see
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// a generic example of how to train those refer to train_shape_predictor_ex.cpp.
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deserialize("mmod_rear_end_vehicle_detector.dat") >> net >> sp;
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matrix<rgb_pixel> img;
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load_image(img, "../mmod_cars_test_image.jpg");
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image_window win;
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win.set_image(img);
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// Run the detector on the image and show us the output.
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for (auto&& d : net(img))
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{
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// We use a shape_predictor to refine the exact shape and location of the detection
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// box. This shape_predictor is trained to simply output the 4 corner points of
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// the box. So all we do is make a rectangle that tightly contains those 4 points
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// and that rectangle is our refined detection position.
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auto fd = sp(img,d);
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rectangle rect;
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for (unsigned long j = 0; j < fd.num_parts(); ++j)
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rect += fd.part(j);
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win.add_overlay(rect, rgb_pixel(255,0,0));
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}
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cout << "Hit enter to view the intermediate processing steps" << endl;
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cin.get();
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// Now let's look at how the detector works. The high level processing steps look like:
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// 1. Create an image pyramid and pack the pyramid into one big image. We call this
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// image the "tiled pyramid".
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// 2. Run the tiled pyramid image through the CNN. The CNN outputs a new image where
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// bright pixels in the output image indicate the presence of cars.
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// 3. Find pixels in the CNN's output image with a value > 0. Those locations are your
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// preliminary car detections.
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// 4. Perform non-maximum suppression on the preliminary detections to produce the
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// final output.
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//
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// We will be plotting the images from steps 1 and 2 so you can visualize what's
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// happening. For the CNN's output image, we will use the jet colormap so that "bright"
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// outputs, i.e. pixels with big values, appear in red and "dim" outputs appear as a
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// cold blue color. To do this we pick a range of CNN output values for the color
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// mapping. The specific values don't matter. They are just selected to give a nice
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// looking output image.
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const float lower = -2.5;
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const float upper = 0.0;
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cout << "jet color mapping range: lower="<< lower << " upper="<< upper << endl;
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// Create a tiled pyramid image and display it on the screen.
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std::vector<rectangle> rects;
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matrix<rgb_pixel> tiled_img;
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// Get the type of pyramid the CNN used
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using pyramid_type = std::remove_reference<decltype(input_layer(net))>::type::pyramid_type;
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// And tell create_tiled_pyramid to create the pyramid using that pyramid type.
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create_tiled_pyramid<pyramid_type>(img, tiled_img, rects,
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input_layer(net).get_pyramid_padding(),
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input_layer(net).get_pyramid_outer_padding());
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image_window winpyr(tiled_img, "Tiled pyramid");
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// This CNN detector represents a sliding window detector with 3 sliding windows. Each
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// of the 3 windows has a different aspect ratio, allowing it to find vehicles which
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// are either tall and skinny, squarish, or short and wide. The aspect ratio of a
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// detection is determined by which channel in the output image triggers the detection.
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// Here we are just going to max pool the channels together to get one final image for
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// our display. In this image, a pixel will be bright if any of the sliding window
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// detectors thinks there is a car at that location.
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cout << "Number of channels in final tensor image: " << net.subnet().get_output().k() << endl;
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matrix<float> network_output = image_plane(net.subnet().get_output(),0,0);
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for (long k = 1; k < net.subnet().get_output().k(); ++k)
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network_output = max_pointwise(network_output, image_plane(net.subnet().get_output(),0,k));
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// We will also upsample the CNN's output image. The CNN we defined has an 8x
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// downsampling layer at the beginning. In the code below we are going to overlay this
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// CNN output image on top of the raw input image. To make that look nice it helps to
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// upsample the CNN output image back to the same resolution as the input image, which
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// we do here.
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const double network_output_scale = img.nc()/(double)network_output.nc();
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resize_image(network_output_scale, network_output);
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// Display the network's output as a color image.
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image_window win_output(jet(network_output, upper, lower), "Output tensor from the network");
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// Also, overlay network_output on top of the tiled image pyramid and display it.
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for (long r = 0; r < tiled_img.nr(); ++r)
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{
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for (long c = 0; c < tiled_img.nc(); ++c)
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{
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dpoint tmp(c,r);
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tmp = input_tensor_to_output_tensor(net, tmp);
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tmp = point(network_output_scale*tmp);
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if (get_rect(network_output).contains(tmp))
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{
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float val = network_output(tmp.y(),tmp.x());
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// alpha blend the network output pixel with the RGB image to make our
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// overlay.
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rgb_alpha_pixel p;
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assign_pixel(p , colormap_jet(val,lower,upper));
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p.alpha = 120;
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assign_pixel(tiled_img(r,c), p);
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}
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}
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}
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// If you look at this image you can see that the vehicles have bright red blobs on
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// them. That's the CNN saying "there is a car here!". You will also notice there is
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// a certain scale at which it finds cars. They have to be not too big or too small,
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// which is why we have an image pyramid. The pyramid allows us to find cars of all
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// scales.
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image_window win_pyr_overlay(tiled_img, "Detection scores on image pyramid");
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// Finally, we can collapse the pyramid back into the original image. The CNN doesn't
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// actually do this step, since it's enough to threshold the tiled pyramid image to get
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// the detections. However, it makes a nice visualization and clearly indicates that
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// the detector is firing for all the cars.
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matrix<float> collapsed(img.nr(), img.nc());
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resizable_tensor input_tensor;
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input_layer(net).to_tensor(&img, &img+1, input_tensor);
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for (long r = 0; r < collapsed.nr(); ++r)
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{
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for (long c = 0; c < collapsed.nc(); ++c)
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{
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// Loop over a bunch of scale values and look up what part of network_output
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// corresponds to the point(c,r) in the original image, then take the max
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// detection score over all the scales and save it at pixel point(c,r).
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float max_score = -1e30;
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for (double scale = 1; scale > 0.2; scale *= 5.0/6.0)
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{
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// Map from input image coordinates to tiled pyramid coordinates.
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dpoint tmp = center(input_layer(net).image_space_to_tensor_space(input_tensor,scale, drectangle(dpoint(c,r))));
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// Now map from pyramid coordinates to network_output coordinates.
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tmp = point(network_output_scale*input_tensor_to_output_tensor(net, tmp));
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if (get_rect(network_output).contains(tmp))
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{
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float val = network_output(tmp.y(),tmp.x());
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if (val > max_score)
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max_score = val;
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}
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}
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collapsed(r,c) = max_score;
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// Also blend the scores into the original input image so we can view it as
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// an overlay on the cars.
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rgb_alpha_pixel p;
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assign_pixel(p , colormap_jet(max_score,lower,upper));
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p.alpha = 120;
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assign_pixel(img(r,c), p);
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}
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}
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image_window win_collapsed(jet(collapsed, upper, lower), "Collapsed output tensor from the network");
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image_window win_img_and_sal(img, "Collapsed detection scores on raw image");
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cout << "Hit enter to end program" << endl;
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cin.get();
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}
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catch(image_load_error& e)
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{
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cout << e.what() << endl;
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cout << "The test image is located in the examples folder. So you should run this program from a sub folder so that the relative path is correct." << endl;
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}
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catch(serialization_error& e)
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{
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cout << e.what() << endl;
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cout << "The correct model file can be obtained from: http://dlib.net/files/mmod_rear_end_vehicle_detector.dat.bz2" << endl;
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}
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catch(std::exception& e)
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{
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cout << e.what() << endl;
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}
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