2 research outputs found

    A Technique for Character Segmentation in Middle zone of Handwritten Hindi words using Hybrid Approach

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    India is a country where people talk in multilingual and write in multi-script. Devanagari is one of the most popular scripts in India, which is used to write Hindi, Sanskrit, Sindhi, Marathi and Nepali Languages. This research work is performed on Hindi language. A large number of precious and essential documents are available in handwritten form, which needs to be converted into editable form. The existence of Optical Character Recognition (OCR) makes this task easier to convert handwritten text in editable form. Character segmentation is an important phase of OCR, which segment the characters from handwritten words. This enhances the accuracy of OCR system. In this paper a hybrid approach is used to segment the characters that contain single and multiple touching characters within a word. The proposed system is tested on a dataset of various handwritten words written by different writers. The dataset of proposed system contains more than 300 handwritten words in Hindi language. Accuracy of the proposed hybrid system is evaluated to 96% which is better than that of existing techniques

    Offline Recognition of Malayalam and Kannada Handwritten Documents Using Deep Learning

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    For a variety of reasons, handwritten text can be digitalized. It is used in a variety of government entities, including banks, post offices, and archaeological departments. Handwriting recognition, on the other hand, is a difficult task as everyone has a different writing style. There are essentially two methods for handwritten recognition: a holistic and an analytic approach. The previous methods of handwriting recognition are time- consuming. However, as deep neural networks have progressed, the approach has become more straightforward than previous methods. Furthermore, the bulk of existing solutions are limited to a single language. To recognise multilanguage handwritten manuscripts offline, this work employs an analytic approach. It describes how to convert Malayalam and Kannada handwritten manuscripts into editable text. Lines are separated from the input document first. After that, word segmentation is performed. Finally, each word is broken down into individual characters. An artificial neural network is utilised for feature extraction and classification. After that, the result is converted to a word document
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