6 research outputs found

    Offline general handwritten word recognition using an approximate BEAM matching algorithm

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    AbstractÐA recognition system for general isolated offline handwritten words using an approximate segment-string matching algorithm is described. The fundamental paradigm employed is a character-based segment-then-recognize/match strategy. Additional user supplied contextual information in the form of a lexicon guides a graph search to estimate the most likely word image identity. This system is designed to operate robustly in the presence of document noise, poor handwriting, and lexicon errors, so this basic strategy is significantly extended and enhanced. A preprocessing step is initially applied to the image to remove noise artifacts and normalize the handwriting. An oversegmentation approach is taken to improve the likelihood of capturing the individual characters embedded in the word. The goal is to produce a segmentation point set that contains one subset which is the correct segmentation of the word image. This is accomplished by a segmentation module, employing several independent detection rules based on certain key features, which finds the most likely segmentation points of the word. Next, a sliding window algorithm, using a character recognition algorithm with a very good noncharacter rejection response, is used to find the most likely character boundaries and identities. A directed graph is then constructed that contains many possible interpretations of the word image, many implausible. Contextual information is used at this point and the lexicon is matched to the graph in a breath-first manner, under an appropriate metric. The matching algorithm employs a BEAM search algorithm with several heuristics to compensate for the most likely errors contained in the interpretation graph, including missing segments from segmentation failures, misrecognition of the segments, and lexicon errors. The most likely graph path and associated confidence is computed for each lexicon word to produce a final lexicon ranking. These confidences ar

    A discrete hidden Markov model for the recognition of handwritten Farsi words

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    Handwriting recognition systems (HRS) have been researched for more than 50 years. Designing a system to recognize specific words in a handwritten clean document is still a difficult task and the challenge is to achieve a high recognition rate. Previously, most of the research in the handwriting recognition domain was conducted on Chinese and Latin languages, while recently more people have shown an interest in the Indo-Iranian script recognition systems. In this thesis, we present an automatic handwriting recognition system for Farsi words. The system was trained, validated and tested on the CENPARMI Farsi Dataset, which was gathered during this research. CENPARMI's Farsi Dataset is unique in terms of its huge number of images (432,357 combined grayscale and binary), inclusion of all possible handwriting types (Dates, Words, Isolated Characters, Isolated Digits, Numeral Strings, Special Symbols, Documents), the variety of cursive styles, the number of writers (400) and the exclusive participation of Native Farsi speakers in the gathering of data. The words were first preprocessed. Concavity and Distribution features were extracted and the codebook was calculated by the vector quantization method. A Discrete Hidden Markov Model was chosen as the classifier because of the cursive nature of the Farsi script. Finally, encouraging recognition rates of98.76% and 96.02% have been obtained for the Training and Testing sets, respectivel

    The rectification and recognition of document images with perspective and geometric distortions

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    Ph.DDOCTOR OF PHILOSOPH

    Reconnaissance de l'écriture manuscrite en-ligne par approche combinant systèmes à vastes marges et modèles de Markov cachés

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    Handwriting recognition is one of the leading applications of pattern recognition and machine learning. Despite having some limitations, handwriting recognition systems have been used as an input method of many electronic devices and helps in the automation of many manual tasks requiring processing of handwriting images. In general, a handwriting recognition system comprises three functional components; preprocessing, recognition and post-processing. There have been improvements made within each component in the system. However, to further open the avenues of expanding its applications, specific improvements need to be made in the recognition capability of the system. Hidden Markov Model (HMM) has been the dominant methods of recognition in handwriting recognition in offline and online systems. However, the use of Gaussian observation densities in HMM and representational model for word modeling often does not lead to good classification. Hybrid of Neural Network (NN) and HMM later improves word recognition by taking advantage of NN discriminative property and HMM representational capability. However, the use of NN does not optimize recognition capability as the use of Empirical Risk minimization (ERM) principle in its training leads to poor generalization. In this thesis, we focus on improving the recognition capability of a cursive online handwritten word recognition system by using an emerging method in machine learning, the support vector machine (SVM). We first evaluated SVM in isolated character recognition environment using IRONOFF and UNIPEN character databases. SVM, by its use of principle of structural risk minimization (SRM) have allowed simultaneous optimization of representational and discriminative capability of the character recognizer. We finally demonstrate the various practical issues in using SVM within a hybrid setting with HMM. In addition, we tested the hybrid system on the IRONOFF word database and obtained favourable results.Nos travaux concernent la reconnaissance de l'écriture manuscrite qui est l'un des domaines de prédilection pour la reconnaissance des formes et les algorithmes d'apprentissage. Dans le domaine de l'écriture en-ligne, les applications concernent tous les dispositifs de saisie permettant à un usager de communiquer de façon transparente avec les systèmes d'information. Dans ce cadre, nos travaux apportent une contribution pour proposer une nouvelle architecture de reconnaissance de mots manuscrits sans contrainte de style. Celle-ci se situe dans la famille des approches hybrides locale/globale où le paradigme de la segmentation/reconnaissance va se trouver résolu par la complémentarité d'un système de reconnaissance de type discriminant agissant au niveau caractère et d'un système par approche modèle pour superviser le niveau global. Nos choix se sont portés sur des Séparateurs à Vastes Marges (SVM) pour le classifieur de caractères et sur des algorithmes de programmation dynamique, issus d'une modélisation par Modèles de Markov Cachés (HMM). Cette combinaison SVM/HMM est unique dans le domaine de la reconnaissance de l'écriture manuscrite. Des expérimentations ont été menées, d'abord dans un cadre de reconnaissance de caractères isolés puis sur la base IRONOFF de mots cursifs. Elles ont montré la supériorité des approches SVM par rapport aux solutions à bases de réseaux de neurones à convolutions (Time Delay Neural Network) que nous avions développées précédemment, et leur bon comportement en situation de reconnaissance de mots
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