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Klaus Broelemann, Anjan Dutta, Xiaoyi Jiang and Josep Llados. 2014. Hierarchical Plausibility-Graphs for Symbol Spotting in Graphical Documents. In Bart Lamiroy and Jean-Marc Ogier, eds. Graphics Recognition. Current Trends and Challenges. Springer Berlin Heidelberg, 25–37. (LNCS.)
Abstract: Graph representation of graphical documents often suffers from noise such as spurious nodes and edges, and their discontinuity. In general these errors occur during the low-level image processing viz. binarization, skeletonization, vectorization etc. Hierarchical graph representation is a nice and efficient way to solve this kind of problem by hierarchically merging node-node and node-edge depending on the distance. But the creation of hierarchical graph representing the graphical information often uses hard thresholds on the distance to create the hierarchical nodes (next state) of the lower nodes (or states) of a graph. As a result, the representation often loses useful information. This paper introduces plausibilities to the nodes of hierarchical graph as a function of distance and proposes a modified algorithm for matching subgraphs of the hierarchical graphs. The plausibility-annotated nodes help to improve the performance of the matching algorithm on two hierarchical structures. To show the potential of this approach, we conduct an experiment with the SESYD dataset.
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Marçal Rusiñol, Dimosthenis Karatzas and Josep Llados. 2014. Spotting Graphical Symbols in Camera-Acquired Documents in Real Time. In Bart Lamiroy and Jean-Marc Ogier, eds. Graphics Recognition. Current Trends and Challenges. Springer Berlin Heidelberg, 3–10. (LNCS.)
Abstract: In this paper we present a system devoted to spot graphical symbols in camera-acquired document images. The system is based on the extraction and further matching of ORB compact local features computed over interest key-points. Then, the FLANN indexing framework based on approximate nearest neighbor search allows to efficiently match local descriptors between the captured scene and the graphical models. Finally, the RANSAC algorithm is used in order to compute the homography between the spotted symbol and its appearance in the document image. The proposed approach is efficient and is able to work in real time.
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Marçal Rusiñol, V. Poulain d'Andecy, Dimosthenis Karatzas and Josep Llados. 2014. Classification of Administrative Document Images by Logo Identification. In Bart Lamiroy and Jean-Marc Ogier, eds. Graphics Recognition. Current Trends and Challenges. Springer Berlin Heidelberg, 49–58.
Abstract: This paper is focused on the categorization of administrative document images (such as invoices) based on the recognition of the supplier’s graphical logo. Two different methods are proposed, the first one uses a bag-of-visual-words model whereas the second one tries to locate logo images described by the blurred shape model descriptor within documents by a sliding-window technique. Preliminar results are reported with a dataset of real administrative documents.
Keywords: Administrative Document Classification; Logo Recognition; Logo Spotting
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Hana Jarraya, Muhammad Muzzamil Luqman and Jean-Yves Ramel. 2017. Improving Fuzzy Multilevel Graph Embedding Technique by Employing Topological Node Features: An Application to Graphics Recognition. In B. Lamiroy and R Dueire Lins, eds. Graphics Recognition. Current Trends and Challenges. Springer. (LNCS.)
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Arnau Baro, Pau Riba, Jorge Calvo-Zaragoza and Alicia Fornes. 2018. Optical Music Recognition by Long Short-Term Memory Networks. In A. Fornes, B.L., ed. Graphics Recognition. Current Trends and Evolutions. Springer, 81–95. (LNCS.)
Abstract: Optical Music Recognition refers to the task of transcribing the image of a music score into a machine-readable format. Many music scores are written in a single staff, and therefore, they could be treated as a sequence. Therefore, this work explores the use of Long Short-Term Memory (LSTM) Recurrent Neural Networks for reading the music score sequentially, where the LSTM helps in keeping the context. For training, we have used a synthetic dataset of more than 40000 images, labeled at primitive level. The experimental results are promising, showing the benefits of our approach.
Keywords: Optical Music Recognition; Recurrent Neural Network; Long ShortTerm Memory
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Lluis Pere de las Heras, Joan Mas, Gemma Sanchez and Ernest Valveny. 2013. Notation-invariant patch-based wall detector in architectural floor plans. Graphics Recognition. New Trends and Challenges. Springer Berlin Heidelberg, 79–88. (LNCS.)
Abstract: Architectural floor plans exhibit a large variability in notation. Therefore, segmenting and identifying the elements of any kind of plan becomes a challenging task for approaches based on grouping structural primitives obtained by vectorization. Recently, a patch-based segmentation method working at pixel level and relying on the construction of a visual vocabulary has been proposed in [1], showing its adaptability to different notations by automatically learning the visual appearance of the elements in each different notation. This paper presents an evolution of that previous work, after analyzing and testing several alternatives for each of the different steps of the method: Firstly, an automatic plan-size normalization process is done. Secondly we evaluate different features to obtain the description of every patch. Thirdly, we train an SVM classifier to obtain the category of every patch instead of constructing a visual vocabulary. These variations of the method have been tested for wall detection on two datasets of architectural floor plans with different notations. After studying in deep each of the steps in the process pipeline, we are able to find the best system configuration, which highly outperforms the results on wall segmentation obtained by the original paper.
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Partha Pratim Roy, Eduard Vazquez, Josep Llados, Ramon Baldrich and Umapada Pal. 2008. A System to Segment Text and Symbols from Color Maps. Graphics Recognition. Recent Advances and New Opportunities.245–256. (LNCS.)
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Josep Llados, Gemma Sanchez and K. Tombre. 2002. An Error-Correction Graph Grammar to Recognize Texture Symbols..
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Oriol Ramos Terrades, Ernest Valveny and Salvatore Tabbone. 2008. On the Combination of Ridgelets Descriptors for Symbol Recognition. Graphics Recognition: Recent Advances and New Oportunities, W. Lius, J. Llados, J.M. Ogier, LNCS 5046:104–113.
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Marçal Rusiñol and Josep Llados. 2008. A Region-Based Hashing Approach for Symbol Spotting in Technical Documents. In W. Lius, J.L., J.M. Ogier, ed. Graphics Recognition: Recent Advances and New Opportunities.104–113. (LNCS.)
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