Marçal Rusiñol, K. Bertet, Jean-Marc Ogier, & Josep Llados. (2009). Symbol Recognition Using a Concept Lattice of Graphical Patterns. In 8th IAPR International Workshop on Graphics Recognition.
Abstract: In this paper we propose a new approach to recognize symbols by the use of a concept lattice. We propose to build a concept lattice in terms of graphical patterns. Each model symbol is decomposed in a set of composing graphical patterns taken as primitives. Each one of these primitives is described by boundary moment invariants. The obtained concept lattice relates which symbolic patterns compose a given graphical symbol. A Hasse diagram is derived from the context and is used to recognize symbols affected by noise. We present some preliminary results over a variation of the dataset of symbols from the GREC 2005 symbol recognition contest.
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Marçal Rusiñol, Agnes Borras, & Josep Llados. (2010). Relational Indexing of Vectorial Primitives for Symbol Spotting in Line-Drawing Images. PRL - Pattern Recognition Letters, 31(3), 188–201.
Abstract: This paper presents a symbol spotting approach for indexing by content a database of line-drawing images. As line-drawings are digital-born documents designed by vectorial softwares, instead of using a pixel-based approach, we present a spotting method based on vector primitives. Graphical symbols are represented by a set of vectorial primitives which are described by an off-the-shelf shape descriptor. A relational indexing strategy aims to retrieve symbol locations into the target documents by using a combined numerical-relational description of 2D structures. The zones which are likely to contain the queried symbol are validated by a Hough-like voting scheme. In addition, a performance evaluation framework for symbol spotting in graphical documents is proposed. The presented methodology has been evaluated with a benchmarking set of architectural documents achieving good performance results.
Keywords: Document image analysis and recognition, Graphics recognition, Symbol spotting ,Vectorial representations, Line-drawings
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Oriol Ramos Terrades, & Ernest Valveny. (2006). A new use of the ridgelets transform for describing linear singularities in images. PRL - Pattern Recognition Letters, 27(6), 587–596.
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Oriol Ramos Terrades, & Ernest Valveny. (2005). Local Norm Features based on ridgelets Transform.
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Oriol Ramos Terrades, & Ernest Valveny. (2003). Radon Transform for Lineal Symbol Representation.
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Oriol Ramos Terrades, & Ernest Valveny. (2003). Indexing Technical Symbols Using Ridgelets Transform.
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Oriol Ramos Terrades, & Ernest Valveny. (2003). Line Detection Using Ridgelets Transform for Graphic Symbol Representation.
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Oriol Ramos Terrades. (2006). Linear Combination of Multiresolution Descriptors: Application to Graphics Recognition (Salvatore Antoine Tabbone, & Ernest Valveny, Eds.). Ph.D. thesis, , .
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Oriol Ramos Terrades. (2003). Descripcio i classificacio de simbols tecnics usant la transformada de crestetes.
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Umapada Pal, Partha Pratim Roy, N. Tripathya, & Josep Llados. (2010). Multi-oriented Bangla and Devnagari text recognition. PR - Pattern Recognition, 43(12), 4124–4136.
Abstract: There are printed complex documents where text lines of a single page may have different orientations or the text lines may be curved in shape. As a result, it is difficult to detect the skew of such documents and hence character segmentation and recognition of such documents are a complex task. In this paper, using background and foreground information we propose a novel scheme towards the recognition of Indian complex documents of Bangla and Devnagari script. In Bangla and Devnagari documents usually characters in a word touch and they form cavity regions. To take care of these cavity regions, background information of such documents is used. Convex hull and water reservoir principle have been applied for this purpose. Here, at first, the characters are segmented from the documents using the background information of the text. Next, individual characters are recognized using rotation invariant features obtained from the foreground part of the characters.
For character segmentation, at first, writing mode of a touching component (word) is detected using water reservoir principle based features. Next, depending on writing mode and the reservoir base-region of the touching component, a set of candidate envelope points is then selected from the contour points of the component. Based on these candidate points, the touching component is finally segmented into individual characters. For recognition of multi-sized/multi-oriented characters the features are computed from different angular information obtained from the external and internal contour pixels of the characters. These angular information are computed in such a way that they do not depend on the size and rotation of the characters. Circular and convex hull rings have been used to divide a character into smaller zones to get zone-wise features for higher recognition results. We combine circular and convex hull features to improve the results and these features are fed to support vector machines (SVM) for recognition. From our experiment we obtained recognition results of 99.18% (98.86%) accuracy when tested on 7515 (7874) Devnagari (Bangla) characters.
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Marco Pedersoli, Jordi Gonzalez, Andrew Bagdanov, & Juan J. Villanueva. (2010). Recursive Coarse-to-Fine Localization for fast Object Recognition. In 11th European Conference on Computer Vision (Vol. 6313, 280–293). LNCS. Springer Berlin Heidelberg.
Abstract: Cascading techniques are commonly used to speed-up the scan of an image for object detection. However, cascades of detectors are slow to train due to the high number of detectors and corresponding thresholds to learn. Furthermore, they do not use any prior knowledge about the scene structure to decide where to focus the search. To handle these problems, we propose a new way to scan an image, where we couple a recursive coarse-to-fine refinement together with spatial constraints of the object location. For doing that we split an image into a set of uniformly distributed neighborhood regions, and for each of these we apply a local greedy search over feature resolutions. The neighborhood is defined as a scanning region that only one object can occupy. Therefore the best hypothesis is obtained as the location with maximum score and no thresholds are needed. We present an implementation of our method using a pyramid of HOG features and we evaluate it on two standard databases, VOC2007 and INRIA dataset. Results show that the Recursive Coarse-to-Fine Localization (RCFL) achieves a 12x speed-up compared to standard sliding windows. Compared with a cascade of multiple resolutions approach our method has slightly better performance in speed and Average-Precision. Furthermore, in contrast to cascading approach, the speed-up is independent of image conditions, the number of detected objects and clutter.
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X. Orriols, Andrew Willis, X. Binefa, & David B. Cooper. (2000). Bayesian estimation of axial symmetries from partial data, a generative model approach.
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Farshad Nourbakhsh, Dimosthenis Karatzas, & Ernest Valveny. (2010). A polar-based logo representation based on topological and colour features. In 9th IAPR International Workshop on Document Analysis Systems (341–348).
Abstract: In this paper, we propose a novel rotation and scale invariant method for colour logo retrieval and classification, which involves performing a simple colour segmentation and subsequently describing each of the resultant colour components based on a set of topological and colour features. A polar representation is used to represent the logo and the subsequent logo matching is based on Cyclic Dynamic Time Warping (CDTW). We also show how combining information about the global distribution of the logo components and their local neighbourhood using the Delaunay triangulation allows to improve the results. All experiments are performed on a dataset of 2500 instances of 100 colour logo images in different rotations and scales.
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Joan Mas, Gemma Sanchez, & Josep Llados. (2009). SSP: Sketching slide Presentations, a Syntactic Approach. In 8th IAPR International Workshop on Graphics Recognition.
Abstract: The design of a slide presentation is a creative process. In this process first, humans visualize in their minds what they want to explain. Then, they have to be able to represent this knowledge in an understandable way. There exists a lot of commercial software that allows to create our own slide presentations but the creativity of the user is rather limited. In this article we present an application that allows the user to create and visualize a slide presentation from a sketch. A slide may be seen as a graphical document or a diagram where its elements are placed in a particular spatial arrangement. To describe and recognize slides a syntactic approach is proposed. This approach is based on an Adjacency Grammar and a parsing methodology to cope with this kind of grammars. The experimental evaluation shows the performance of our methodology from a qualitative and a quantitative point of view. Six different slides containing different number of symbols, from 4 to 7, have been given to the users and they have drawn them without restrictions in the order of the elements. The quantitative results give an idea on how suitable is our methodology to describe and recognize the different elements in a slide.
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Joan Mas, Gemma Sanchez, Josep Llados, & B. Lamiroy. (2007). An Incremental On-line Parsing Algorithm for Recognizing Sketching Diagrams. In 9th IEEE International Conference on Document Analysis and Recognition (Vol. 1, 452–456).
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