Store images of people who you would like to recognize and the app, using these images, will classify those people. We don't need to modify the app/retrain any ML model to add more people ( subjects ) for classification
Do check an enhanced version of this project,
- Asynchronous processing with Kotlin Coroutines
- Quick labelling of faces with C++ computation (See
native
branch) - Use of latest Android development practices with configurable camera facing, GPU usage and mask detection.
If you're ML developer, you might have heard about FaceNet, Google's state-of-the-art model for generating face embeddings. In this
project, we'll use the FaceNet model on Android and generate embeddings ( fixed size vectors ) which hold information of the face.
The accuracy of the face detection system ( with FaceNet ) may not have a considerable accuracy. Make sure you explore other options as well while considering your app's production.
So, the aim of the FaceNet model is to generate a 128 dimensional vector of a given face. It takes in an 160 * 160 RGB image and
outputs an array with 128 elements. How is it going to help us in our face recognition project?
Well, the FaceNet model generates similar face vectors for similar faces. Here, by the term "similar", we mean
the vectors which point out in the same direction.
In this app, we'll generate two such vectors and use a suitable metric to compare them ( either L2norm or cosine similarity ).
The one which is the closest will form our desired output.
You can download the FaceNet Keras .h5
file from this repo and TFLite model
from the assets
folder.
So, an user can store images in his/her device in a specific folder. If, for instance, the user wants the app to recognize
two people namely "Rahul" and "Neeta". So the user needs to store the images by creating two directories namely "Rahul" and "Neeta"
and store their images inside of these directories. For instance, the file structure for the working example ( as shown above in the GIF ),
The app will then process these images and classify these people thereafter. For face recognition, Firebase MLKit is used which
fetches bounding boxes for all the faces present in the camera frame.
For better performance, we recommend developers to use more images of the subjects, they need to recognize.
The app's working is described in the steps below:
-
Scan the
images
folder present in the internal storage. Next, parse all the images present withinimages
folder and store
the names of sub directories withinimages
. For every image, collect bounding box coordinates ( as aRect
) using MLKit. Crop the face from the image ( the one which was collected from user's storage ) using the bounding box coordinates. -
Finally, we have a list of cropped
Bitmap
of the faces present in the images. Next, feed the croppedBitmap
to the FaceNet
model and get the embeddings ( asFloatArray
). Now, we create aHashMap<String,FloatArray>
object where we store the names of
the sub directories as keys and the embeddings as their corresponding values.
See MainActivity.kt
and FileReader.kt
for the code.
The above procedure is carried out only on the app's startup. The steps below will execute on each camera frame.
- Using
androidx.camera.core.ImageAnalysis
, we construct aFrameAnalyser
class which processes the camera frames. Now, for a
given frame, we first get the bounding box coordinates ( as aRect
) of all the faces present in the frame. Crop the face from
the frame using these boxes. - Feed the cropped faces to the FaceNet model to generate embeddings for them. We compare the embedding with a suitable metric and
form clusters for each user. We compute the average score for each cluster. The cluster with the best score is our output.
The final output is then stored as a
Prediction
and passed to theBoundingBoxOverlay
which draws boxes and
text. - For multiple images for a single user, we compute the score for each image. An average score is computed for each group.
The group with the best score is chosen as the output. See
FrameAnalyser.kt
.
images ->
Rahul ->
image_rahul_1.png -> score=0.6 --- | average = 0.65 --- |
image_rahul_2.png -> score=0.5 ----| | --- output -> "Rahul"
Neeta -> |
image_neeta_1.png -> score=0.4 --- | average = 0.35 --- |
image_neeta_2.png -> score=0.3 ----|
See FaceNetModel.kt
and FrameAnalyser.kt
for the code.
Predictions may go wrong as FaceNet does not always produce similar embeddings for the same person.
Consider the accuracy of the FaceNet model while using it in your apps. In that case, you may learn to use the FaceNetModel
class separating for using FaceNet in some other tasks.