Today we will learn how to detect lines and circles in an image, with the help of a technique called Hough transform.
What is Hough space?
Before we start applying Hough transform to images, we need to understand what a Hough space is, and we will learn that in the way of an example.
Parameter space
When we work with images, we can imagine the image being a 2d matrix over some x and y coordinates, under which a line could be described as y = mx + b
But in parameter space, which we will call Hough space, I can represent that same line as m
vs b
instead, so the characterization of a line on image space, will be a single point at the position m-b
in Hough space.
But we have a problem though, with y = mx + b
, we cannot represent a vertical line, as the slope is infinite. So we need a better way parametrization, polar coordinates (rho and theta).
Hough space
- rho: describes the distance of the line from the origin
- theta: describes the angle away from horizontal
One very important observation though, is what happens when we take multiple points around a line, and we transform into our Hough space.
A single dot on image space translates to a curve on Hough space, with the particularity that points among a line on image space will be represented by multiple curves with a single touchpoint.
And this will be our target, finding the points where a group of curves intersects.
What is Hough transform?
Hough transform is a feature extraction method for detecting simple shapes such as circles, lines, etc in an image.
The “simple” characteristic is derived by the shape representation in terms of parameters. A “simple” shape will be only represented by a few parameters, for example a line can be represented by its slope and intercept, or a circle which can be represented by x, y and radius.
In our line example, a Hough transform will be responsible for processing the dots on the image and calculating the values in Hough space.
The algorithm for making the transformation happen and subsequently finding the intersecting curves is little bit complicated, and thus out of the scope of this post. However we will take a look at an implementation of this algorithm, which is part of the OpenCV library.
Detecting lines using OpenCV
In OpenCV, line detection using Hough Transform is implemented in the functions HoughLines
and HoughLinesP
(Probabilistic Hough Transform). We will focus on the latter.
The function expects the following parameters:
-
image
: 8-bit, single-channel binary source image. The image may be modified by the function. -
lines
: Output vector of lines. Each line is represented by a 4-element vector (x_1, y_1, x_2, y_2) , where (x_1,y_1) and (x_2, y_2) are the ending points of each detected line segment. -
rho
: Distance resolution of the accumulator in pixels. -
theta
: Angle resolution of the accumulator in radians. -
threshold
: Accumulator threshold parameter. Only those lines are returned that get enough votes -
minLineLength
: Minimum line length. Line segments shorter than that are rejected. -
maxLineGap
: Maximum allowed gap between points on the same line to link them.
Too complicated? it’s easier with an example:
# Read image
img = cv2.imread('lanes.jpg', cv2.IMREAD_COLOR)
# Convert the image to gray-scale
gray = cv2.cvtColor(img, cv2.COLOR_BGR2GRAY)
# Find the edges in the image using canny detector
edges = cv2.Canny(gray, 50, 200)
# Detect points that form a line
lines = cv2.HoughLinesP(edges, 1, np.pi/180, max_slider, minLineLength=10, maxLineGap=250)
# Draw lines on the image
for line in lines:
x1, y1, x2, y2 = line[0]
cv2.line(img, (x1, y1), (x2, y2), (255, 0, 0), 3)
# Show result
cv2.imshow("Result Image", img)
And here is the result:
It is very important that we actually use an edge only image as parameter for the Hough Transform, otherwise the algorithm won’t work as intended.
Detecting circles using OpenCV
The process goes about the same as for lines, with the exception that this time we will use a different function from the OpenCV library. We will use now HoughCircles
, which accepts the following parameters:
-
image
: 8-bit, single-channel, grayscale input image. -
circles
: Output vector of found circles. Each vector is encoded as a 3-element floating-point vector (x, y, radius) . -
circle_storage
: In C function this is a memory storage that will contain the output sequence of found circles. -
method
: Detection method to use. Currently, the only implemented method is CV_HOUGH_GRADIENT , which is basically 21HT -
dp
: Inverse ratio of the accumulator resolution to the image resolution. For example, if dp=1 , the accumulator has the same resolution as the input image. If dp=2 , the accumulator has half as big width and height. -
minDist
: Minimum distance between the centers of the detected circles. If the parameter is too small, multiple neighbor circles may be falsely detected in addition to a true one. If it is too large, some circles may be missed. -
param1
: First method-specific parameter. In case of CV_HOUGH_GRADIENT , it is the higher threshold of the two passed to the Canny() edge detector (the lower one is twice smaller). -
param2
: Second method-specific parameter. In case of CV_HOUGH_GRADIENT , it is the accumulator threshold for the circle centers at the detection stage. The smaller it is, the more false circles may be detected. Circles, corresponding to the larger accumulator values, will be returned first. -
minRadius
: Minimum circle radius. -
maxRadius
: Maximum circle radius.
Remember the parameters needs to be different, as we can’t describe a circle with the same parametrization we used for lines, and instead, we need to use an equation like (x - x0)^^2 + (y - y0)^^2 = r^^2
.
And to the code:
# Read image as gray-scale
img = cv2.imread('circles.png', cv2.IMREAD_COLOR)
# Convert to gray-scale
gray = cv2.cvtColor(img, cv2.COLOR_BGR2GRAY)
# Blur the image to reduce noise
img_blur = cv2.medianBlur(gray, 5)
# Apply hough transform on the image
circles = cv2.HoughCircles(img_blur, cv2.HOUGH_GRADIENT, 1, img.shape[0]/64, param1=200, param2=10, minRadius=5, maxRadius=30)
# Draw detected circles
if circles is not None:
circles = np.uint16(np.around(circles))
for i in circles[0, :]:
# Draw outer circle
cv2.circle(img, (i[0], i[1]), i[2], (0, 255, 0), 2)
# Draw inner circle
cv2.circle(img, (i[0], i[1]), 2, (0, 0, 255), 3)
Note that compared to the previous example, we are not applying here any edge detection function. This is because the function HoughCircles
has inbuilt canny detection.
And the result:
Conclusion
Hough Transform is an excellent technique for detecting simple shapes in images and has several applications, ranging from medical applications such as x-ray, CT and MRI analysis, to self-driving cars. If you are interested in knowing more about Hough space, I recommend that you actually run the code, try different configurations by yourself, and that you check out the OpenCV documentation for additional information.
Thanks for reading!
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