Over the past few years, there has been an increased interest in automatic facial behavior analysis and understanding. We present OpenFace – a tool intended for computer vision and machine learning researchers, affective computing community and people interested in building interactive applications based on facial behavior analysis. OpenFace is the first toolkit capable of facial landmark detection, head pose estimation, facial action unit recognition, and eye-gaze estimation with available source code. The computer vision algorithms which represent the core of OpenFace demonstrate state-of-the-art results in all of the above mentioned tasks. Furthermore, our tool is capable of real-time performance and is able to run from a simple webcam without any specialist hardware.
OpenFace is an implementation of a number of research papers from the Multicomp group, Language Technologies Institute at the Carnegie Mellon University and Rainbow Group, Computer Laboratory, University of Cambridge. The founder of the project and main developer is Tadas Baltrušaitis.
Special thanks goes to Louis-Philippe Morency and his MultiComp Lab at Carnegie Mellon University for help in writing and testing the code, and Erroll Wood for the gaze estimation work.
For instructions of how to install/compile/use the project please see WIKI
The system is capable of performing a number of facial analysis tasks:
- Facial Landmark Detection
- Facial Landmark and head pose tracking (links to YouTube videos)
- Facial Action Unit Recognition
- Gaze tracking (image of it in action)
- Facial Feature Extraction (aligned faces and HOG features)
If you use any of the resources provided on this page in any of your publications we ask you to cite the following work and the work for a relevant submodule you used.
OpenFace: an open source facial behavior analysis toolkit Tadas Baltrušaitis, Peter Robinson, and Louis-Philippe Morency, in IEEE Winter Conference on Applications of Computer Vision, 2016
Constrained Local Neural Fields for robust facial landmark detection in the wild Tadas Baltrušaitis, Peter Robinson, and Louis-Philippe Morency. in IEEE Int. Conference on Computer Vision Workshops, 300 Faces in-the-Wild Challenge, 2013.
Rendering of Eyes for Eye-Shape Registration and Gaze Estimation Erroll Wood, Tadas Baltrušaitis, Xucong Zhang, Yusuke Sugano, Peter Robinson, and Andreas Bulling in IEEE International. Conference on Computer Vision (ICCV), 2015
Cross-dataset learning and person-specific normalisation for automatic Action Unit detection Tadas Baltrušaitis, Marwa Mahmoud, and Peter Robinson in Facial Expression Recognition and Analysis Challenge, IEEE International Conference on Automatic Face and Gesture Recognition, 2015
For inquiries about the commercial licensing of the OpenFace toolkit please contact innovation@cmu.edu
I did my best to make sure that the code runs out of the box but there are always issues and I would be grateful for your understanding that this is research code and not full fledged product. However, if you encounter any problems/bugs/issues please contact me on github or by emailing me at Tadas.Baltrusaitis@cl.cam.ac.uk for any bug reports/questions/suggestions. I prefer questions and bug reports on github as that provides visibility to others who might be encountering same issues or who have the same questions.
Copyright can be found in the Copyright.txt
You have to respect boost, TBB, dlib, OpenBLAS, and OpenCV licenses.
Furthermore you have to respect the licenses of the datasets used for model training - https://github.com/TadasBaltrusaitis/OpenFace/wiki/Datasets