68 research outputs found

    Detection of Text Lines of Handwritten Arabic Manuscripts using Markov Decision Processes

    Get PDF
    In a character recognition systems, the segmentation phase is critical since the accuracy of the recognition depend strongly on it. In this paper we present an approach based on Markov Decision Processes to extract text lines from binary images of Arabic handwritten documents. The proposed approach detects the connected components belonging to the same line by making use of knowledge about features and arrangement of those components. The initial results show that the system is promising for extracting Arabic handwritten lines

    Using contour information and segmentation for object registration, modeling and retrieval

    Get PDF
    This thesis considers different aspects of the utilization of contour information and syntactic and semantic image segmentation for object registration, modeling and retrieval in the context of content-based indexing and retrieval in large collections of images. Target applications include retrieval in collections of closed silhouettes, holistic w ord recognition in handwritten historical manuscripts and shape registration. Also, the thesis explores the feasibility of contour-based syntactic features for improving the correspondence of the output of bottom-up segmentation to semantic objects present in the scene and discusses the feasibility of different strategies for image analysis utilizing contour information, e.g. segmentation driven by visual features versus segmentation driven by shape models or semi-automatic in selected application scenarios. There are three contributions in this thesis. The first contribution considers structure analysis based on the shape and spatial configuration of image regions (socalled syntactic visual features) and their utilization for automatic image segmentation. The second contribution is the study of novel shape features, matching algorithms and similarity measures. Various applications of the proposed solutions are presented throughout the thesis providing the basis for the third contribution which is a discussion of the feasibility of different recognition strategies utilizing contour information. In each case, the performance and generality of the proposed approach has been analyzed based on extensive rigorous experimentation using as large as possible test collections

    최적화 방법을 이용한 문서영상의 텍스트 라인 및 단어 검출법

    Get PDF
    학위논문 (박사)-- 서울대학교 대학원 : 전기·컴퓨터공학부, 2015. 8. 조남익.Locating text-lines and segmenting words in a document image are important processes for various document image processing applications such as optical character recognition, document rectification, layout analysis and document image compression. Thus, there have been a lot of researches in this area, and the segmentation of machine-printed documents scanned by flatbed scanners have been matured to some extent. However, in the case of handwritten documents, it is considered a challenging problem since the features of handwritten document are irregular and diverse depending on a person and his/her language. To address this problem, this dissertation presents new segmentation algorithms which extract text-lines and words from a document image based on a new super-pixel representation method and a new energy minimization framework from its characteristics. The overview of the proposed algorithms is as follows. First, this dissertation presents a text-line extraction algorithm for handwritten documents based on an energy minimization framework with a new super-pixel representation scheme. In order to deal with the documents in various languages, a language-independent text-line extraction algorithm is developed based on the super-pixel representation with normalized connected components(CCs). Due to this normalization, the proposed method is able to estimate the states of super-pixels for a range of different languages and writing styles. From the estimated states, an energy function is formulated whose minimization yields text-lines. Experimental results show that the proposed method yields the state-of-the-art performance on various handwritten databases. Second, a preprocessing method of historical documents for text-line detection is presented. Unlike modern handwritten documents, historical documents suffer from various types of degradations. To alleviate these roblems, the preprocessing algorithm including robust binarization and noise removal is introduced in this dissertation. For the robust binarization of historical documents, global and local thresholding binarization methods are combined to deal with various degradations such as stains and fainted characters. Also, the energy minimization framework is modified to fit the characteristics of historical documents. Experimental results on two historical databases show that the proposed preprocessing method with text-line detection algorithm achieves the best detection performance on severely degraded historical documents. Third, this dissertation presents word segmentation algorithm based on structured learning framework. In this dissertation, the word segmentation problem is formulated as a labeling problem that assigns a label (intra- word/inter-word gap) to each gap between the characters in a given text-line. In order to address the feature irregularities especially on handwritten documents, the word segmentation problem is formulated as a binary quadratic assignment problem that considers pairwise correlations between the gaps as well as the likelihoods of individual gaps based on the proposed text-line extraction results. Even though many parameters are involved in the formulation, all parameters are estimated based on the structured SVM framework so that the proposed method works well regardless of writing styles and written languages without user-defined parameters. Experimental results on ICDAR 2009/2013 handwriting segmentation databases show that proposed method achieves the state-of-the-art performance on Latin-based and Indian languages.Abstract i Contents iii List of Figures vii List of Tables xiii 1 Introduction 1 1.1 Text-line Detection of Document Images 2 1.2 Word Segmentation of Document Images 5 1.3 Summary of Contribution 8 2 Related Work 11 2.1 Text-line Detection 11 2.2 Word Segmentation 13 3 Text-line Detection of Handwritten Document Images based on Energy Minimization 15 3.1 Proposed Approach for Text-line Detection 15 3.1.1 State Estimation of a Document Image 16 3.1.2 Problems with Under-segmented Super-pixels for Estimating States 18 3.1.3 A New Super-pixel Representation Method based on CC Partitioning 20 3.1.4 Cost Function for Text-line Segmentation 24 3.1.5 Minimization of Cost Function 27 3.2 Experimental Results of Various Handwritten Databases 30 3.2.1 Evaluation Measure 31 3.2.2 Parameter Selection 31 3.2.3 Experiment on HIT-MW Database 32 3.2.4 Experiment on ICDAR 2009/2013 Handwriting Segmentation Databases 35 3.2.5 Experiment on IAM Handwriting Database 38 3.2.6 Experiment on UMD Handwritten Arabic Database 46 3.2.7 Limitations 48 4 Preprocessing Method of Historical Document for Text-line Detection 53 4.1 Characteristics of Historical Documents 54 4.2 A Combined Approach for the Binarization of Historical Documents 56 4.3 Experimental Results of Text-line Detection for Historical Documents 61 4.3.1 Evaluation Measure and Configurations 61 4.3.2 George Washington Database 63 4.3.3 ICDAR 2015 ANDAR Datasets 65 5 Word Segmentation Method for Handwritten Documents based on Structured Learning 69 5.1 Proposed Approach for Word Segmentation 69 5.1.1 Text-line Segmentation and Super-pixel Representation 70 5.1.2 Proposed Energy Function for Word Segmentation 71 5.2 Structured Learning Framework 72 5.2.1 Feature Vector 72 5.2.2 Parameter Estimation by Structured SVM 75 5.3 Experimental Results 77 6 Conclusions 83 Bibliography 85 Abstract (Korean) 96Docto

    Automatic Handwriting Feature Extraction, Analysis and Visualization in the Context of Digital Palaeography

    Get PDF
    Digital palaeography is an emerging research area which aims to introduce digital image processing techniques into palaeographic analysis for the purpose of providing objective quantitative measurements. This paper explores the use of a fully automated handwriting feature extraction, visualization, and analysis system for digital palaeography which bridges the gap between traditional and digital palaeography in terms of the deployment of feature extraction techniques and handwriting metrics. We propose the application of a set of features, more closely related to conventional palaeographic assesment metrics than those commonly adopted in automatic writer identification. These features are emprically tested on two datasets in order to assess their effectiveness for automatic writer identification and aid attribution of individual handwriting characteristics in historical manuscripts. Finally, we introduce tools to support visualization of the extracted features in a comparative way, showing how they can best be exploited in the implementation of a content-based image retrieval (CBIR) system for digital archiving. Read More: http://www.worldscientific.com/doi/abs/10.1142/S021800141653001

    Arabic cursive text recognition from natural scene images

    Full text link
    © 2019 by the authors. This paper presents a comprehensive survey on Arabic cursive scene text recognition. The recent years' publications in this field have witnessed the interest shift of document image analysis researchers from recognition of optical characters to recognition of characters appearing in natural images. Scene text recognition is a challenging problem due to the text having variations in font styles, size, alignment, orientation, reflection, illumination change, blurriness and complex background. Among cursive scripts, Arabic scene text recognition is contemplated as a more challenging problem due to joined writing, same character variations, a large number of ligatures, the number of baselines, etc. Surveys on the Latin and Chinese script-based scene text recognition system can be found, but the Arabic like scene text recognition problem is yet to be addressed in detail. In this manuscript, a description is provided to highlight some of the latest techniques presented for text classification. The presented techniques following a deep learning architecture are equally suitable for the development of Arabic cursive scene text recognition systems. The issues pertaining to text localization and feature extraction are also presented. Moreover, this article emphasizes the importance of having benchmark cursive scene text dataset. Based on the discussion, future directions are outlined, some of which may provide insight about cursive scene text to researchers

    Invariant encoding schemes for visual recognition

    Get PDF
    Many encoding schemes, such as the Scale Invariant Feature Transform (SIFT) and Histograms of Oriented Gradients (HOG), make use of templates of histograms to enable a loose encoding of the spatial position of basic features such as oriented gradients. Whilst such schemes have been successfully applied, the use of a template may limit the potential as it forces the histograms to conform to a rigid spatial arrangement. In this work we look at developing novel schemes making use of histograms, without the need for a template, which offer good levels of performance in visual recognition tasks. To do this, we look at the way the basic feature type changes across scale at individual locations. This gives rise to the notion of column features, which capture this change across scale by concatenating feature types at a given scale separation. As well as applying this idea to oriented gradients, we make wide use of Basic Image Features (BIFs) and oriented Basic Image Features (oBIFs) which encode local symmetry information. This resulted in a range of encoding schemes. We then tested these schemes on problems of current interest in three application areas. First, the recognition of characters taken from natural images, where our system outperformed existing methods. For the second area we selected a texture problem, involving the discrimination of quartz grains using surface texture, where the system achieved near perfect performance on the first task, and a level of performance comparable to an expert human on the second. In the third area, writer identification, the system achieved a perfect score and outperformed other methods when tested using the Arabic handwriting dataset as part of the ICDAR 2011 Competition

    Content Recognition and Context Modeling for Document Analysis and Retrieval

    Get PDF
    The nature and scope of available documents are changing significantly in many areas of document analysis and retrieval as complex, heterogeneous collections become accessible to virtually everyone via the web. The increasing level of diversity presents a great challenge for document image content categorization, indexing, and retrieval. Meanwhile, the processing of documents with unconstrained layouts and complex formatting often requires effective leveraging of broad contextual knowledge. In this dissertation, we first present a novel approach for document image content categorization, using a lexicon of shape features. Each lexical word corresponds to a scale and rotation invariant local shape feature that is generic enough to be detected repeatably and is segmentation free. A concise, structurally indexed shape lexicon is learned by clustering and partitioning feature types through graph cuts. Our idea finds successful application in several challenging tasks, including content recognition of diverse web images and language identification on documents composed of mixed machine printed text and handwriting. Second, we address two fundamental problems in signature-based document image retrieval. Facing continually increasing volumes of documents, detecting and recognizing unique, evidentiary visual entities (\eg, signatures and logos) provides a practical and reliable supplement to the OCR recognition of printed text. We propose a novel multi-scale framework to detect and segment signatures jointly from document images, based on the structural saliency under a signature production model. We formulate the problem of signature retrieval in the unconstrained setting of geometry-invariant deformable shape matching and demonstrate state-of-the-art performance in signature matching and verification. Third, we present a model-based approach for extracting relevant named entities from unstructured documents. In a wide range of applications that require structured information from diverse, unstructured document images, processing OCR text does not give satisfactory results due to the absence of linguistic context. Our approach enables learning of inference rules collectively based on contextual information from both page layout and text features. Finally, we demonstrate the importance of mining general web user behavior data for improving document ranking and other web search experience. The context of web user activities reveals their preferences and intents, and we emphasize the analysis of individual user sessions for creating aggregate models. We introduce a novel algorithm for estimating web page and web site importance, and discuss its theoretical foundation based on an intentional surfer model. We demonstrate that our approach significantly improves large-scale document retrieval performance

    Making large art historical photo archives searchable

    Get PDF
    In recent years, museums, archives and other cultural institutions have initiated important programs to digitize their collections. Millions of artefacts (paintings, engravings, drawings, ancient photographs) are now represented in digital photographic format. Furthermore, through progress in standardization, a growing portion of these images are now available online, in an easily accessible manner. This thesis studies how such large-scale art history collection can be made searchable using new deep learning approaches for processing and comparing images. It takes as a case study the processing of the photo archive of the Foundation Giorgio Cini, where more than 300'000 images have been digitized. We demonstrate how a generic processing pipeline can reliably extract the visual and textual content of scanned images, opening up ways to efficiently digitize large photo-collections. Then, by leveraging an annotated graph of visual connections, a metric is learnt that allows clustering and searching through artwork reproductions independently of their medium, effectively solving a difficult problem of cross-domain image search. Finally, the thesis studies how a complex Web Interface allows users to perform different searches based on this metric. We also evaluate the process by which users can annotate elements of interest during their navigation to be added to the database, allowing the system to be trained further and give better results. By documenting a complete approach on how to go from a physical photo-archive to a state-of-the-art navigation system, this thesis paves the way for a global search engine across the world's photo archives
    corecore