4 research outputs found

    Text Recognition Past, Present and Future

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    Text recognition in various images is a research domain which attempts to develop a computer programs with a feature to read the text from images by the computer. Thus there is a need of character recognition mechanisms which results Document Image Analysis (DIA) which changes different documents in paper format computer generated electronic format. In this paper we have read and analyzed various methods for text recognition from different types of text images like scene images, text images, born digital images and text from videos. Text Recognition is an easy task for people who can read, but to make a computer that does character recognition is highly difficult task. The reasons behind this might be variability, abstraction and absence of various hard-and-fast rules that locate the appearance of a visual character in various text images. Therefore rules that is to be applied need to be very heuristically deduced from samples domain. This paper gives a review for various existing methods. The objective of this paper is to give a summary on well-known methods

    Image-Based Mobile Service: Automatic Text Extraction and Translation

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    We present a new mobile service for the translation of text from images taken by consumer-grade cell-phone cameras. Such capability represents a new paradigm for users where a simple image provides the basis for a service. The ubiquity and ease of use of cell-phone cameras enables acquisition and transmission of images anywhere and at any time a user wishes, delivering rapid and accurate translation over the phone’s MMS and SMS facilities. Target text is extracted completely automatically, requiring no bounding box delineation or related user intervention. The service uses localization, binarization, text deskewing, and optical character recognition (OCR) in its analysis. Once the text is translated, an SMS message is sent to the user with the result. Further novelties include that no software installation is required on the handset, any service provider or camera phone can be used, and the entire service is implemented on the server side

    Cell Phones as Imaging Sensors

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    Camera phones are ubiquitous, and consumers have been adopting them faster than any other technology in modern history. When connected to a network, though, they are capable of more than just picture taking: Suddenly, they gain access to the power of the cloud. We exploit this capability by providing a series of image-based personal advisory services. These are designed to work with any handset over any cellular carrier using commonly available Multimedia Messaging Service (MMS) and Short Message Service (SMS) features. Targeted at the unsophisticated consumer, these applications must be quick and easy to use, not requiring download capabilities or preplanning. Thus, all application processing occurs in the back-end system (i.e., as a cloud service) and not on the handset itself. Presenting an image to an advisory service in the cloud, a user receives information that can be acted upon immediately. Two of our examples involve color assessment – selecting cosmetics and home décor paint palettes; the third provides the ability to extract text from a scene. In the case of the color imaging applications, we have shown that our service rivals the advice quality of experts. The result of this capability is a new paradigm for mobile interactions — image-based information services exploiting the ubiquity of camera phones

    Development of image processing and vision systems with industrial applications

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