#!/usr/bin/python # The contents of this file are in the public domain. See LICENSE_FOR_EXAMPLE_PROGRAMS.txt # # This example program shows how to find frontal human faces in an image and # estimate their pose. The pose takes the form of 68 landmarks. These are # points on the face such as the corners of the mouth, along the eyebrows, on # the eyes, and so forth. # # This face detector is made using the classic Histogram of Oriented # Gradients (HOG) feature combined with a linear classifier, an image pyramid, # and sliding window detection scheme. The pose estimator was created by # using dlib's implementation of the paper: # One Millisecond Face Alignment with an Ensemble of Regression Trees by # Vahid Kazemi and Josephine Sullivan, CVPR 2014 # and was trained on the iBUG 300-W face landmark dataset. # # Also, note that you can train your own models using dlib's machine learning # tools. See train_shape_predictor.py to see an example. # # You can get the shape_predictor_68_face_landmarks.dat file from: # http://sourceforge.net/projects/dclib/files/dlib/v18.10/shape_predictor_68_face_landmarks.dat.bz2 # # COMPILING THE DLIB PYTHON INTERFACE # Dlib comes with a compiled python interface for python 2.7 on MS Windows. If # you are using another python version or operating system then you need to # compile the dlib python interface before you can use this file. To do this, # run compile_dlib_python_module.bat. This should work on any operating # system so long as you have CMake and boost-python installed. # On Ubuntu, this can be done easily by running the command: # sudo apt-get install libboost-python-dev cmake # # Also note that this example requires scikit-image which can be installed # via the command: # pip install -U scikit-image # Or downloaded from http://scikit-image.org/download.html. import sys import os import dlib import glob from skimage import io if len(sys.argv) != 3: print( "Give the path to the trained shape predictor model as the first " "argument and then the directory containing the facial images.\n" "For example, if you are in the python_examples folder then " "execute this program by running:\n" " ./face_landmark_detection.py shape_predictor_68_face_landmarks.dat ../examples/faces\n" "You can download a trained facial shape predictor from:\n" " http://sourceforge.net/projects/dclib/files/dlib/v18.10/shape_predictor_68_face_landmarks.dat.bz2") exit() predictor_path = sys.argv[1] faces_folder_path = sys.argv[2] detector = dlib.get_frontal_face_detector() predictor = dlib.shape_predictor(predictor_path) win = dlib.image_window() for f in glob.glob(os.path.join(faces_folder_path, "*.jpg")): print("Processing file: {}".format(f)) img = io.imread(f) win.clear_overlay() win.set_image(img) # Ask the detector to find the bounding boxes of each face. The 1 in the # second argument indicates that we should upsample the image 1 time. This # will make everything bigger and allow us to detect more faces. dets = detector(img, 1) print("Number of faces detected: {}".format(len(dets))) for k, d in enumerate(dets): print("Detection {}: Left: {} Top: {} Right: {} Bottom: {}".format( k, d.left(), d.top(), d.right(), d.bottom())) # Get the landmarks/parts for the face in box d. shape = predictor(img, d) print("Part 0: {}, Part 1: {} ...".format(shape.part(0), shape.part(1))) # Draw the face landmarks on the screen. win.add_overlay(shape) win.add_overlay(dets) dlib.hit_enter_to_continue()