Active shape model
Active shape models are statistical models of the shape of objects which iteratively deform to fit to an example of the object in a new image, developed by Tim Cootes and Chris Taylor in 1995. The shapes are constrained by the PDM Statistical Shape Model to vary only in ways seen in a training set of labelled examples.
The shape of an object is represented by a set of points. The ASM algorithm aims to match the model to a new image.
The ASM works by alternating the following steps:
- Generate a suggested shape by looking in the image around each point for a better position for the point. This is commonly done using what is called a "profile model", which looks for strong edges or uses the Mahalanobis distance to match a model template for the point.
- Conform the suggested shape to the point distribution model, commonly called a "shape model" in this context. The figure to the right shows an example.
It is closely related to the active appearance model. It is also known as a "Smart Snakes" method, since it is an analog to an active contour model which would respect explicit shape constraints.