I am using the function findHomography
of OpenCV with the RANSAC method in order to find the homography that relates two images linked with a set of keypoints. Main issue is that I haven’t been able to find anywhere yet what are the values of the mask matrix that the function outputs. Only information that I know is that 0 values are outliers, and non zero values are inliers. But what does it mean the inliers value? Anyone knows?
Thanks in advance!
Piece of code where I call findHomography
:
cv::Mat H12;
cv::Mat mask;
H12 = cv::findHomography(FvPointsIm1, FvPointsIm2, mask, CV_RANSAC, 5);
ui->Debug_Label->setText(Mat2QString(mask));
The mask returned by findHomography
is an 8-bit, single-channel cv::Mat
(or std::vector<uchar>
, if you prefer) containing either 0
or 1
indicating the outlier status.
EDIT: You access each element of the mask by calling .at<double>
, which is leading to the confusing output. You should be using .at<uchar>
, which will interpret the matrix value correctly.
I used the findHomography method after applying keypoint matching.
- Inliers are matched keypoints that are calculated to be true positives (correct matches);
- Outliers are matched keypoints that are calculated to be false positives (false matches).
Then you can use the mask output to extract the subset of correct matches from all matches.
There is an example in Python 3.6 & OpenCV 3.4.1:
good_kp = [gray_kp[m.queryIdx].pt for m in good_matches] correct_matched_kp = [good_kp[i] for i in range(len(good_kp)) if mask[i]]
来源:https://stackoverflow.com/questions/15815304/opencv-c-findhomography-mask-values-meaning