Detector 2D or 3D face landmarks from Python
Detect facial landmarks from Python using the world's most accurate face alignment network, capable of detecting points in both 2D and 3D coordinates.
Build using FAN's state-of-the-art deep learning based face alignment method.
Note: The lua version is available here.
For numerical evaluations it is highly recommended to use the lua version which uses indentical models with the ones evaluated in the paper. More models will be added soon.
import face_alignment
from skimage import io
fa = face_alignment.FaceAlignment(face_alignment.LandmarksType.TWO_D, flip_input=False)
input = io.imread('../test/assets/aflw-test.jpg')
preds = fa.get_landmarks(input)
import face_alignment
from skimage import io
fa = face_alignment.FaceAlignment(face_alignment.LandmarksType.THREE_D, flip_input=False)
input = io.imread('../test/assets/aflw-test.jpg')
preds = fa.get_landmarks(input)
import face_alignment
from skimage import io
fa = face_alignment.FaceAlignment(face_alignment.LandmarksType.TWO_D, flip_input=False)
preds = fa.get_landmarks_from_directory('../test/assets/')
By default the package will use the SFD face detector. However the users can alternatively use dlib, BlazeFace, or pre-existing ground truth bounding boxes.
import face_alignment
# sfd for SFD, dlib for Dlib and folder for existing bounding boxes.
fa = face_alignment.FaceAlignment(face_alignment.LandmarksType.TWO_D, face_detector='sfd')
In order to specify the device (GPU or CPU) on which the code will run one can explicitly pass the device flag:
import torch
import face_alignment
# cuda for CUDA, mps for Apple M1/2 GPUs.
fa = face_alignment.FaceAlignment(face_alignment.LandmarksType.TWO_D, device='cpu')
# running using lower precision
fa = fa = face_alignment.FaceAlignment(face_alignment.LandmarksType.TWO_D, dtype=torch.bfloat16, device='cuda')
Please also see the examples
folder
# dlib (fast, may miss faces)
model = FaceAlignment(landmarks_type= LandmarksType.TWO_D, face_detector='dlib')
# SFD (likely best results, but slowest)
model = FaceAlignment(landmarks_type= LandmarksType.TWO_D, face_detector='sfd')
# Blazeface (front camera model)
model = FaceAlignment(landmarks_type= LandmarksType.TWO_D, face_detector='blazeface')
# Blazeface (back camera model)
model = FaceAlignment(landmarks_type= LandmarksType.TWO_D, face_detector='blazeface', face_detector_kwargs={'back_model': True})
While not required, for optimal performance(especially for the detector) it is highly recommended to run the code using a CUDA enabled GPU.
The easiest way to install it is using either pip or conda:
Using pip | Using conda |
---|---|
pip install face-alignment |
conda install -c 1adrianb face_alignment |
Alternatively, bellow, you can find instruction to build it from source.
Install pytorch and pytorch dependencies. Please check the pytorch readme for this.
git clone https://github.com/1adrianb/face-alignment
pip install -r requirements.txt
python setup.py install
A Dockerfile is provided to build images with cuda support and cudnn. For more instructions about running and building a docker image check the orginal Docker documentation.
docker build -t face-alignment .
While here the work is presented as a black-box, if you want to know more about the intrisecs of the method please check the original paper either on arxiv or my webpage.
All contributions are welcomed. If you encounter any issue (including examples of images where it fails) feel free to open an issue. If you plan to add a new features please open an issue to discuss this prior to making a pull request.
@inproceedings{bulat2017far,
title={How far are we from solving the 2D \& 3D Face Alignment problem? (and a dataset of 230,000 3D facial landmarks)},
author={Bulat, Adrian and Tzimiropoulos, Georgios},
booktitle={International Conference on Computer Vision},
year={2017}
}
For citing dlib, pytorch or any other packages used here please check the original page of their respective authors.