In this example, we use template matching to identify the occurrence of an
image patch (in this case, a sub-image centered on a single coin). Here, we
return a single match (the exact same coin), so the maximum value in the
match_template
result corresponds to the coin location. The other coins
look similar, and thus have local maxima; if you expect multiple matches, you
should use a proper peak-finding function.
The match_template
function uses fast, normalized cross-correlation [1]
to find instances of the template in the image. Note that the peaks in the
output of match_template
correspond to the origin (i.e. top-left corner) of
the template.
[1] | J. P. Lewis, “Fast Normalized Cross-Correlation”, Industrial Light and Magic. |
import numpy as np
import matplotlib.pyplot as plt
from skimage import data
from skimage.feature import match_template
image = data.coins()
coin = image[170:220, 75:130]
result = match_template(image, coin)
ij = np.unravel_index(np.argmax(result), result.shape)
x, y = ij[::-1]
fig = plt.figure(figsize=(8, 3))
ax1 = plt.subplot(1, 3, 1)
ax2 = plt.subplot(1, 3, 2, adjustable='box-forced')
ax3 = plt.subplot(1, 3, 3, sharex=ax2, sharey=ax2, adjustable='box-forced')
ax1.imshow(coin)
ax1.set_axis_off()
ax1.set_title('template')
ax2.imshow(image)
ax2.set_axis_off()
ax2.set_title('image')
# highlight matched region
hcoin, wcoin = coin.shape
rect = plt.Rectangle((x, y), wcoin, hcoin, edgecolor='r', facecolor='none')
ax2.add_patch(rect)
ax3.imshow(result)
ax3.set_axis_off()
ax3.set_title('`match_template`\nresult')
# highlight matched region
ax3.autoscale(False)
ax3.plot(x, y, 'o', markeredgecolor='r', markerfacecolor='none', markersize=10)
plt.show()
Python source code: download
(generated using skimage
0.12.3)
IPython Notebook: download
(generated using skimage
0.12.3)