ABSTRACT

The human face is perhaps the most familiar and easily recognized object in the world, yet both its three-dimensional shape and its two-dimensional images are complex and hard to characterize. This book develops the vocabulary of ridges and parabolic curves, of illumination eigenfaces and elastic warpings for describing the perceptually salient fea

chapter 1|20 pages

Faces from a Pattern-Theoretic Perspective

chapter 2|24 pages

Overview of Approaches to Face Recognition

chapter 3|34 pages

Modeling Variations in Illumination

chapter 4|26 pages

Modeling Variations in Geometry

chapter 5|20 pages

Recognition from Image Data

chapter 6|40 pages

Parabolic Curves and Ridges on Surfaces

chapter 7|36 pages

Sculpting a Surface

chapter 8|16 pages

Finding Facial Features from Range Data

chapter 9|24 pages

Recognition from Range Data

chapter 10|8 pages

What‘s Next?