2016 |
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Thanh Ha Do, Salvatore Tabbone and Oriol Ramos Terrades. 2016. Spotting Symbol over Graphical Documents Via Sparsity in Visual Vocabulary. Recent Trends in Image Processing and Pattern Recognition.
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Veronica Romero, Alicia Fornes, Enrique Vidal and Joan Andreu Sanchez. 2016. Using the MGGI Methodology for Category-based Language Modeling in Handwritten Marriage Licenses Books. 15th international conference on Frontiers in Handwriting Recognition.
Abstract: Handwritten marriage licenses books have been used for centuries by ecclesiastical and secular institutions to register marriages. The information contained in these historical documents is useful for demography studies and
genealogical research, among others. Despite the generally simple structure of the text in these documents, automatic transcription and semantic information extraction is difficult due to the distinct and evolutionary vocabulary, which is composed mainly of proper names that change along the time. In previous
works we studied the use of category-based language models to both improve the automatic transcription accuracy and make easier the extraction of semantic information. Here we analyze the main causes of the semantic errors observed in previous results and apply a Grammatical Inference technique known as MGGI to improve the semantic accuracy of the language model obtained. Using this language model, full handwritten text recognition experiments have been carried out, with results supporting the interest of the proposed approach.
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Y. Patel, Lluis Gomez, Marçal Rusiñol and Dimosthenis Karatzas. 2016. Dynamic Lexicon Generation for Natural Scene Images. 14th European Conference on Computer Vision Workshops.395–410.
Abstract: Many scene text understanding methods approach the endtoend recognition problem from a word-spotting perspective and take huge benet from using small per-image lexicons. Such customized lexicons are normally assumed as given and their source is rarely discussed.
In this paper we propose a method that generates contextualized lexicons
for scene images using only visual information. For this, we exploit
the correlation between visual and textual information in a dataset consisting
of images and textual content associated with them. Using the topic modeling framework to discover a set of latent topics in such a dataset allows us to re-rank a xed dictionary in a way that prioritizes the words that are more likely to appear in a given image. Moreover, we train a CNN that is able to reproduce those word rankings but using only the image raw pixels as input. We demonstrate that the quality of the automatically obtained custom lexicons is superior to a generic frequency-based baseline.
Keywords: scene text; photo OCR; scene understanding; lexicon generation; topic modeling; CNN
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Youssef El Rhabi, Simon Loic, Brun Luc, Josep Llados and Felipe Lumbreras. 2016. Information Theoretic Rotationwise Robust Binary Descriptor Learning. Joint IAPR International Workshops on Statistical Techniques in Pattern Recognition (SPR) and Structural and Syntactic Pattern Recognition (SSPR).368–378.
Abstract: In this paper, we propose a new data-driven approach for binary descriptor selection. In order to draw a clear analysis of common designs, we present a general information-theoretic selection paradigm. It encompasses several standard binary descriptor construction schemes, including a recent state-of-the-art one named BOLD. We pursue the same endeavor to increase the stability of the produced descriptors with respect to rotations. To achieve this goal, we have designed a novel offline selection criterion which is better adapted to the online matching procedure. The effectiveness of our approach is demonstrated on two standard datasets, where our descriptor is compared to BOLD and to several classical descriptors. In particular, it emerges that our approach can reproduce equivalent if not better performance as BOLD while relying on twice shorter descriptors. Such an improvement can be influential for real-time applications.
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2015 |
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Anguelos Nicolaou, Andrew Bagdanov, Marcus Liwicki and Dimosthenis Karatzas. 2015. Sparse Radial Sampling LBP for Writer Identification. 13th International Conference on Document Analysis and Recognition ICDAR2015.716–720.
Abstract: In this paper we present the use of Sparse Radial Sampling Local Binary Patterns, a variant of Local Binary Patterns (LBP) for text-as-texture classification. By adapting and extending the standard LBP operator to the particularities of text we get a generic text-as-texture classification scheme and apply it to writer identification. In experiments on CVL and ICDAR 2013 datasets, the proposed feature-set demonstrates State-Of-the-Art (SOA) performance. Among the SOA, the proposed method is the only one that is based on dense extraction of a single local feature descriptor. This makes it fast and applicable at the earliest stages in a DIA pipeline without the need for segmentation, binarization, or extraction of multiple features.
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Carles Sanchez, Oriol Ramos Terrades, Patricia Marquez, Enric Marti, J.Roncaries and Debora Gil. 2015. Automatic evaluation of practices in Moodle for Self Learning in Engineering.
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Christophe Rigaud, Clement Guerin, Dimosthenis Karatzas, Jean-Christophe Burie and Jean-Marc Ogier. 2015. Knowledge-driven understanding of images in comic books. IJDAR, 18(3), 199–221.
Abstract: Document analysis is an active field of research, which can attain a complete understanding of the semantics of a given document. One example of the document understanding process is enabling a computer to identify the key elements of a comic book story and arrange them according to a predefined domain knowledge. In this study, we propose a knowledge-driven system that can interact with bottom-up and top-down information to progressively understand the content of a document. We model the comic book’s and the image processing domains knowledge for information consistency analysis. In addition, different image processing methods are improved or developed to extract panels, balloons, tails, texts, comic characters and their semantic relations in an unsupervised way.
Keywords: Document Understanding; comics analysis; expert system
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David Aldavert, Marçal Rusiñol, Ricardo Toledo and Josep Llados. 2015. A Study of Bag-of-Visual-Words Representations for Handwritten Keyword Spotting. IJDAR, 18(3), 223–234.
Abstract: The Bag-of-Visual-Words (BoVW) framework has gained popularity among the document image analysis community, specifically as a representation of handwritten words for recognition or spotting purposes. Although in the computer vision field the BoVW method has been greatly improved, most of the approaches in the document image analysis domain still rely on the basic implementation of the BoVW method disregarding such latest refinements. In this paper, we present a review of those improvements and its application to the keyword spotting task. We thoroughly evaluate their impact against a baseline system in the well-known George Washington dataset and compare the obtained results against nine state-of-the-art keyword spotting methods. In addition, we also compare both the baseline and improved systems with the methods presented at the Handwritten Keyword Spotting Competition 2014.
Keywords: Bag-of-Visual-Words; Keyword spotting; Handwritten documents; Performance evaluation
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Dimosthenis Karatzas and 12 others. 2015. ICDAR 2015 Competition on Robust Reading. 13th International Conference on Document Analysis and Recognition ICDAR2015.1156–1160.
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Fernando Vilariño and Dimosthenis Karatzas. 2015. The Library Living Lab. Open Living Lab Days.
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