Coursera-Deep Learning Specialization 课程之(四):Convolutional Neural Networks: -weak3编程作业

自动驾驶中的车辆检测

Autonomous driving - Car detection

import argparse
import os
import matplotlib.pyplot as plt
from matplotlib.pyplot import imshow
import scipy.io
import scipy.misc
import numpy as np
import pandas as pd
import PIL
import tensorflow as tf
from keras import backend as K
from keras.layers import Input, Lambda, Conv2D
from keras.models import load_model, Model
from yolo_utils import read_classes, read_anchors, generate_colors, preprocess_image, draw_boxes, scale_boxes
from yad2k.models.keras_yolo import yolo_head, yolo_boxes_to_corners, preprocess_true_boxes, yolo_loss, yolo_body

%matplotlib inline

1 - Problem Statement

Coursera-Deep Learning Specialization 课程之(四):Convolutional Neural Networks: -weak3编程作业_第1张图片

2 - YOLO

YOLO (“you only look once”) is a popular algoritm because it achieves high accuracy while also being able to run in real-time. This algorithm “only looks once” at the image in the sense that it requires only one forward propagation pass through the network to make predictions. After non-max suppression, it then outputs recognized objects together with the bounding boxes.

2.1 - Model details

First things to know:
The input is a batch of images of shape (m, 608, 608, 3)
The output is a list of bounding boxes along with the recognized classes. Each bounding box is represented by 6 numbers (pc,bx,by,bh,bw,c)(pc,bx,by,bh,bw,c) as explained above. If you expand cc into an 80-dimensional vector, each bounding box is then represented by 85 numbers.
We will use 5 anchor boxes. So you can think of the YOLO architecture as the following: IMAGE (m, 608, 608, 3) -> DEEP CNN -> ENCODING (m, 19, 19, 5, 85).
Lets look in greater detail at what this encoding represents.
Coursera-Deep Learning Specialization 课程之(四):Convolutional Neural Networks: -weak3编程作业_第2张图片
Since we are using 5 anchor boxes, each of the 19 x19 cells thus encodes information about 5 boxes. Anchor boxes are defined only by their width and height.
For simplicity, we will flatten the last two last dimensions of the shape (19, 19, 5, 85) encoding. So the output of the Deep CNN is (19, 19, 425).
Coursera-Deep Learning Specialization 课程之(四):Convolutional Neural Networks: -weak3编程作业_第3张图片
Now, for each box (of each cell) we will compute the following elementwise product and extract a probability that the box contains a certain class.
Coursera-Deep Learning Specialization 课程之(四):Convolutional Neural Networks: -weak3编程作业_第4张图片
Here’s one way to visualize what YOLO is predicting on an image:
For each of the 19x19 grid cells, find the maximum of the probability scores (taking a max across both the 5 anchor boxes and across different classes).
Color that grid cell according to what object that grid cell considers the most likely.
Doing this results in this picture:

Another way to visualize YOLO’s output is to plot the bounding boxes that it outputs. Doing that results in a visualization like this:
Coursera-Deep Learning Specialization 课程之(四):Convolutional Neural Networks: -weak3编程作业_第5张图片
In the figure above, we plotted only boxes that the model had assigned a high probability to, but this is still too many boxes. You’d like to filter the algorithm’s output down to a much smaller number of detected objects. To do so, you’ll use non-max suppression. Specifically, you’ll carry out these steps:
Get rid of boxes with a low score (meaning, the box is not very confident about detecting a class)
Select only one box when several boxes overlap with each other and detect the same object.

2.2 - Filtering with a threshold on class scores

# GRADED FUNCTION: yolo_filter_boxes

def yolo_filter_boxes(box_confidence, boxes, box_class_probs, threshold = .6):
    """Filters YOLO boxes by thresholding on object and class confidence.

    Arguments:
    box_confidence -- tensor of shape (19, 19, 5, 1)
    boxes -- tensor of shape (19, 19, 5, 4)
    box_class_probs -- tensor of shape (19, 19, 5, 80)
    threshold -- real value, if [ highest class probability score < threshold], then get rid of the corresponding box

    Returns:
    scores -- tensor of shape (None,), containing the class probability score for selected boxes
    boxes -- tensor of shape (None, 4), containing (b_x, b_y, b_h, b_w) coordinates of selected boxes
    classes -- tensor of shape (None,), containing the index of the class detected by the selected boxes

    Note: "None" is here because you don't know the exact number of selected boxes, as it depends on the threshold. 
    For example, the actual output size of scores would be (10,) if there are 10 boxes.
    """

    # Step 1: Compute box scores
    ### START CODE HERE ### (≈ 1 line)
    box_scores = box_confidence*box_class_probs
    ### END CODE HERE ###

    # Step 2: Find the box_classes thanks to the max box_scores, keep track of the corresponding score
    ### START CODE HERE ### (≈ 2 lines)
    box_classes = K.argmax(box_scores,axis=-1)
    box_class_scores = K.max(box_scores,axis=-1)
    ### END CODE HERE ###

    # Step 3: Create a filtering mask based on "box_class_scores" by using "threshold". The mask should have the
    # same dimension as box_class_scores, and be True for the boxes you want to keep (with probability >= threshold)
    ### START CODE HERE ### (≈ 1 line)
    filtering_mask =  box_class_scores>=threshold
    ### END CODE HERE ###

    # Step 4: Apply the mask to scores, boxes and classes
    ### START CODE HERE ### (≈ 3 lines)
    scores = tf.boolean_mask(box_class_scores,filtering_mask)
    boxes = tf.boolean_mask(boxes,filtering_mask)
    classes = tf.boolean_mask(box_classes,filtering_mask)
    ### END CODE HERE ###

    return scores, boxes, classes
with tf.Session() as test_a:
    box_confidence = tf.random_normal([19, 19, 5, 1], mean=1, stddev=4, seed = 1)
    boxes = tf.random_normal([19, 19, 5, 4], mean=1, stddev=4, seed = 1)
    box_class_probs = tf.random_normal([19, 19, 5, 80], mean=1, stddev=4, seed = 1)
    scores, boxes, classes = yolo_filter_boxes(box_confidence, boxes, box_class_probs, threshold = 0.5)
    print(box_class_scores)
    print("scores[2] = " + str(scores[2].eval()))
    print("boxes[2] = " + str(boxes[2].eval()))
    print("classes[2] = " + str(classes[2].eval()))
    print("scores.shape = " + str(scores.shape))
    print("boxes.shape = " + str(boxes.shape))
    print("classes.shape = " + str(classes.shape))

2.3 - Non-max suppression

# GRADED FUNCTION: iou

def iou(box1, box2):
    """Implement the intersection over union (IoU) between box1 and box2

    Arguments:
    box1 -- first box, list object with coordinates (x1, y1, x2, y2)
    box2 -- second box, list object with coordinates (x1, y1, x2, y2)
    """

    # Calculate the (y1, x1, y2, x2) coordinates of the intersection of box1 and box2. Calculate its Area.
    ### START CODE HERE ### (≈ 5 lines)
    xi1 = np.maximum(box1[0],box2[0])
    yi1 = np.maximum(box1[1],box2[1])
    xi2 = np.minimum(box1[2],box2[2])
    yi2 = np.minimum(box1[3],box2[3])
    inter_area = (xi2 - xi1) * (yi2 - yi1)
    ### END CODE HERE ###    

    # Calculate the Union area by using Formula: Union(A,B) = A + B - Inter(A,B)
    ### START CODE HERE ### (≈ 3 lines)
    box1_area = (np.maximum(box1[0],box1[2])-np.minimum(box1[0],box1[2]))*(np.maximum(box1[1],box1[3])-np.minimum(box1[1],box1[3]))
    box2_area = (np.maximum(box2[0],box2[2])-np.minimum(box2[0],box2[2]))*(np.maximum(box2[1],box2[3])-np.minimum(box2[1],box2[3]))
    union_area = box1_area+box2_area-inter_area
    ### END CODE HERE ###

    # compute the IoU
    ### START CODE HERE ### (≈ 1 line)
    iou = inter_area/ union_area
    ### END CODE HERE ###

    return iou
box1 = (2, 1, 4, 3)
box2 = (1, 2, 3, 4) 
print("iou = " + str(iou(box1, box2)))

iou = 0.142857142857

# GRADED FUNCTION: yolo_non_max_suppression

def yolo_non_max_suppression(scores, boxes, classes, max_boxes = 10, iou_threshold = 0.5):
    """
    Applies Non-max suppression (NMS) to set of boxes

    Arguments:
    scores -- tensor of shape (None,), output of yolo_filter_boxes()
    boxes -- tensor of shape (None, 4), output of yolo_filter_boxes() that have been scaled to the image size (see later)
    classes -- tensor of shape (None,), output of yolo_filter_boxes()
    max_boxes -- integer, maximum number of predicted boxes you'd like
    iou_threshold -- real value, "intersection over union" threshold used for NMS filtering

    Returns:
    scores -- tensor of shape (, None), predicted score for each box
    boxes -- tensor of shape (4, None), predicted box coordinates
    classes -- tensor of shape (, None), predicted class for each box

    Note: The "None" dimension of the output tensors has obviously to be less than max_boxes. Note also that this
    function will transpose the shapes of scores, boxes, classes. This is made for convenience.
    """

    max_boxes_tensor = K.variable(max_boxes, dtype='int32')     # tensor to be used in tf.image.non_max_suppression()
    K.get_session().run(tf.variables_initializer([max_boxes_tensor])) # initialize variable max_boxes_tensor

    # Use tf.image.non_max_suppression() to get the list of indices corresponding to boxes you keep
    ### START CODE HERE ### (≈ 1 line)
    nms_indices = tf.image.non_max_suppression(boxes,scores,max_boxes,iou_threshold = 0.5)
    ### END CODE HERE ###

    # Use K.gather() to select only nms_indices from scores, boxes and classes
    ### START CODE HERE ### (≈ 3 lines)
    scores = K.gather(scores,nms_indices)
    boxes = K.gather(boxes,nms_indices)
    classes = K.gather(classes,nms_indices )
    ### END CODE HERE ###

    return scores, boxes, classes
with tf.Session() as test_b:
    scores = tf.random_normal([54,], mean=1, stddev=4, seed = 1)
    boxes = tf.random_normal([54, 4], mean=1, stddev=4, seed = 1)
    classes = tf.random_normal([54,], mean=1, stddev=4, seed = 1)
    scores, boxes, classes = yolo_non_max_suppression(scores, boxes, classes)
    print("scores[2] = " + str(scores[2].eval()))
    print("boxes[2] = " + str(boxes[2].eval()))
    print("classes[2] = " + str(classes[2].eval()))
    print("scores.shape = " + str(scores.eval().shape))
    print("boxes.shape = " + str(boxes.eval().shape))
    print("classes.shape = " + str(classes.eval().shape))

scores[2] = 6.9384
boxes[2] = [-5.299932 3.13798141 4.45036697 0.95942086]
classes[2] = -2.24527
scores.shape = (10,)
boxes.shape = (10, 4)
classes.shape = (10,)

2.4 Wrapping up the filtering

It’s time to implement a function taking the output of the deep CNN (the 19x19x5x85 dimensional encoding) and filtering through all the boxes using the functions you’ve just implemented.
Exercise: Implement yolo_eval() which takes the output of the YOLO encoding and filters the boxes using score threshold and NMS. There’s just one last implementational detail you have to know. There’re a few ways of representing boxes, such as via their corners or via their midpoint and height/width. YOLO converts between a few such formats at different times, using the following functions (which we have provided):
boxes = yolo_boxes_to_corners(box_xy, box_wh)
which converts the yolo box coordinates (x,y,w,h) to box corners’ coordinates (x1, y1, x2, y2) to fit the input of yolo_filter_boxes
boxes = scale_boxes(boxes, image_shape)
YOLO’s network was trained to run on 608x608 images. If you are testing this data on a different size image–for example, the car detection dataset had 720x1280 images–this step rescales the boxes so that they can be plotted on top of the original 720x1280 image.
Don’t worry about these two functions; we’ll show you where they need to be called.

# GRADED FUNCTION: yolo_eval

def yolo_eval(yolo_outputs, image_shape = (720., 1280.), max_boxes=10, score_threshold=.6, iou_threshold=.5):
    """
    Converts the output of YOLO encoding (a lot of boxes) to your predicted boxes along with their scores, box coordinates and classes.

    Arguments:
    yolo_outputs -- output of the encoding model (for image_shape of (608, 608, 3)), contains 4 tensors:
                    box_confidence: tensor of shape (None, 19, 19, 5, 1)
                    box_xy: tensor of shape (None, 19, 19, 5, 2)
                    box_wh: tensor of shape (None, 19, 19, 5, 2)
                    box_class_probs: tensor of shape (None, 19, 19, 5, 80)
    image_shape -- tensor of shape (2,) containing the input shape, in this notebook we use (608., 608.) (has to be float32 dtype)
    max_boxes -- integer, maximum number of predicted boxes you'd like
    score_threshold -- real value, if [ highest class probability score < threshold], then get rid of the corresponding box
    iou_threshold -- real value, "intersection over union" threshold used for NMS filtering

    Returns:
    scores -- tensor of shape (None, ), predicted score for each box
    boxes -- tensor of shape (None, 4), predicted box coordinates
    classes -- tensor of shape (None,), predicted class for each box
    """

    ### START CODE HERE ### 

    # Retrieve outputs of the YOLO model (≈1 line)
    box_confidence, box_xy, box_wh, box_class_probs = yolo_outputs

    # Convert boxes to be ready for filtering functions 
    boxes = yolo_boxes_to_corners(box_xy, box_wh)

    # Use one of the functions you've implemented to perform Score-filtering with a threshold of score_threshold (≈1 line)
    scores, boxes, classes = yolo_filter_boxes(box_confidence, boxes, box_class_probs, threshold = .6)

    # Scale boxes back to original image shape.
    boxes = scale_boxes(boxes, image_shape)

    # Use one of the functions you've implemented to perform Non-max suppression with a threshold of iou_threshold (≈1 line)
    scores, boxes, classes = yolo_non_max_suppression(scores, boxes, classes, max_boxes = 10, iou_threshold = 0.5)

    ### END CODE HERE ###

    return scores, boxes, classes
with tf.Session() as test_b:
    yolo_outputs = (tf.random_normal([19, 19, 5, 1], mean=1, stddev=4, seed = 1),
                    tf.random_normal([19, 19, 5, 2], mean=1, stddev=4, seed = 1),
                    tf.random_normal([19, 19, 5, 2], mean=1, stddev=4, seed = 1),
                    tf.random_normal([19, 19, 5, 80], mean=1, stddev=4, seed = 1))
    scores, boxes, classes = yolo_eval(yolo_outputs)
    print("scores[2] = " + str(scores[2].eval()))
    print("boxes[2] = " + str(boxes[2].eval()))
    print("classes[2] = " + str(classes[2].eval()))
    print("scores.shape = " + str(scores.eval().shape))
    print("boxes.shape = " + str(boxes.eval().shape))
    print("classes.shape = " + str(classes.eval().shape))
scores[2] = 138.791
boxes[2] = [ 1292.32971191  -278.52166748  3876.98925781  -835.56494141]
classes[2] = 54
scores.shape = (10,)
boxes.shape = (10, 4)
classes.shape = (10,)

3 - Test YOLO pretrained model on images

In this part, you are going to use a pretrained model and test it on the car detection dataset. As usual, you start by creating a session to start your graph. Run the following cell.

sess = K.get_session()

3.1 - Defining classes, anchors and image shape.

Recall that we are trying to detect 80 classes, and are using 5 anchor boxes. We have gathered the information about the 80 classes and 5 boxes in two files “coco_classes.txt” and “yolo_anchors.txt”. Let’s load these quantities into the model by running the next cell.
The car detection dataset has 720x1280 images, which we’ve pre-processed into 608x608 images.

class_names = read_classes("model_data/coco_classes.txt")
anchors = read_anchors("model_data/yolo_anchors.txt")
image_shape = (720., 1280.)    

3.2 - Loading a pretrained model

Training a YOLO model takes a very long time and requires a fairly large dataset of labelled bounding boxes for a large range of target classes. You are going to load an existing pretrained Keras YOLO model stored in “yolo.h5”. (These weights come from the official YOLO website, and were converted using a function written by Allan Zelener. References are at the end of this notebook. Technically, these are the parameters from the “YOLOv2” model, but we will more simply refer to it as “YOLO” in this notebook.) Run the cell below to load the model from this file.

yolo_model = load_model("model_data/yolo.h5")
yolo_model.summary()

3.3 - Convert output of the model to usable bounding box tensors

yolo_outputs = yolo_head(yolo_model.output, anchors, len(class_names))

3.4 - Filtering boxes

yolo_outputs gave you all the predicted boxes of yolo_model in the correct format. You’re now ready to perform filtering and select only the best boxes. Lets now call yolo_eval, which you had previously implemented, to do this.

scores, boxes, classes = yolo_eval(yolo_outputs, image_shape)

3.5 - Run the graph on an image

def predict(sess, image_file):
    """
    Runs the graph stored in "sess" to predict boxes for "image_file". Prints and plots the preditions.

    Arguments:
    sess -- your tensorflow/Keras session containing the YOLO graph
    image_file -- name of an image stored in the "images" folder.

    Returns:
    out_scores -- tensor of shape (None, ), scores of the predicted boxes
    out_boxes -- tensor of shape (None, 4), coordinates of the predicted boxes
    out_classes -- tensor of shape (None, ), class index of the predicted boxes

    Note: "None" actually represents the number of predicted boxes, it varies between 0 and max_boxes. 
    """

    # Preprocess your image
    image, image_data = preprocess_image("images/" + image_file, model_image_size = (608, 608))

    # Run the session with the correct tensors and choose the correct placeholders in the feed_dict.
    # You'll need to use feed_dict={yolo_model.input: ... , K.learning_phase(): 0})
    ### START CODE HERE ### (≈ 1 line)
    out_scores, out_boxes, out_classes = sess.run(
                    [scores,boxes,classes],
                     feed_dict={
                         yolo_model.input:image_data,
                         K.learning_phase():0
                     })
    ### END CODE HERE ###

    # Print predictions info
    print('Found {} boxes for {}'.format(len(out_boxes), image_file))
    # Generate colors for drawing bounding boxes.
    colors = generate_colors(class_names)
    # Draw bounding boxes on the image file
    draw_boxes(image, out_scores, out_boxes, out_classes, class_names, colors)
    # Save the predicted bounding box on the image
    image.save(os.path.join("out", image_file), quality=90)
    # Display the results in the notebook
    output_image = scipy.misc.imread(os.path.join("out", image_file))
    imshow(output_image)

    return out_scores, out_boxes, out_classes
out_scores, out_boxes, out_classes = predict(sess, "0005.jpg")

Found 5 boxes for 0005.jpg
car 0.64 (207, 297) (338, 340)
car 0.65 (741, 266) (918, 313)
car 0.67 (15, 313) (128, 362)
car 0.72 (883, 260) (1026, 303)
car 0.75 (517, 282) (689, 336)
Coursera-Deep Learning Specialization 课程之(四):Convolutional Neural Networks: -weak3编程作业_第6张图片
换一张图片检测
Coursera-Deep Learning Specialization 课程之(四):Convolutional Neural Networks: -weak3编程作业_第7张图片

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