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Salim Jouili, Salvatore Tabbone and Ernest Valveny. 2009. Evaluation of graph matching measures for documents retrieval. In proceedings of 8th IAPR International Workshop on Graphics Recognition.13–21.
Abstract: In this paper we evaluate four graph distance measures. The analysis is performed for document retrieval tasks. For this aim, different kind of documents are used which include line drawings (symbols), ancient documents (ornamental letters), shapes and trademark-logos. The experimental results show that the performance of each grahp distance measure depends on the kind of data and the graph representation technique.
Keywords: Graph Matching; Graph retrieval; structural representation; Performance Evaluation
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Marçal Rusiñol, V. Poulain d'Andecy, Dimosthenis Karatzas and Josep Llados. 2011. Classification of Administrative Document Images by Logo Identification. In proceedings of 9th IAPR Workshop on Graphic Recognition.
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.
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Anjan Dutta, Josep Llados and Umapada Pal. 2011. Bag-of-GraphPaths Descriptors for Symbol Recognition and Spotting in Line Drawings. In proceedings of 9th IAPR Workshop on Graphic Recognition. Springer Berlin Heidelberg. (LNCS.)
Abstract: Graphical symbol recognition and spotting recently have become an important research activity. In this work we present a descriptor for symbols, especially for line drawings. The descriptor is based on the graph representation of graphical objects. We construct graphs from the vectorized information of the binarized images, where the critical points detected by the vectorization algorithm are considered as nodes and the lines joining them are considered as edges. Graph paths between two nodes in a graph are the finite sequences of nodes following the order from the starting to the final node. The occurrences of different graph paths in a given graph is an important feature, as they capture the geometrical and structural attributes of a graph. So the graph representing a symbol can efficiently be represent by the occurrences of its different paths. Their occurrences in a symbol can be obtained in terms of a histogram counting the number of some fixed prototype paths, we call the histogram as the Bag-of-GraphPaths (BOGP). These BOGP histograms are used as a descriptor to measure the distance among the symbols in vector space. We use the descriptor for three applications, they are: (1) classification of the graphical symbols, (2) spotting of the architectural symbols on floorplans, (3) classification of the historical handwritten words.
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Marçal Rusiñol, R.Roset, Josep Llados and C.Montaner. 2011. Automatic Index Generation of Digitized Map Series by Coordinate Extraction and Interpretation. In Proceedings of the Sixth International Workshop on Digital Technologies in Cartographic Heritage.
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Marçal Rusiñol, Lluis Pere de las Heras and Oriol Ramos Terrades. 2014. Flowchart Recognition for Non-Textual Information Retrieval in Patent Search. IR, 17(5-6), 545–562.
Abstract: Relatively little research has been done on the topic of patent image retrieval and in general in most of the approaches the retrieval is performed in terms of a similarity measure between the query image and the images in the corpus. However, systems aimed at overcoming the semantic gap between the visual description of patent images and their conveyed concepts would be very helpful for patent professionals. In this paper we present a flowchart recognition method aimed at achieving a structured representation of flowchart images that can be further queried semantically. The proposed method was submitted to the CLEF-IP 2012 flowchart recognition task. We report the obtained results on this dataset.
Keywords: Flowchart recognition; Patent documents; Text/graphics separation; Raster-to-vector conversion; Symbol recognition
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Gemma Sanchez, Josep Llados and Enric Marti. 1997. Segmentation and analysis of linial texture in plans. Intelligence Artificielle et Complexité.. Paris.
Abstract: The problem of texture segmentation and interpretation is one of the main concerns in the field of document analysis. Graphical documents often contain areas characterized by a structural texture whose recognition allows both the document understanding, and its storage in a more compact way. In this work, we focus on structural linial textures of regular repetition contained in plan documents. Starting from an atributed graph which represents the vectorized input image, we develop a method to segment textured areas and recognize their placement rules. We wish to emphasize that the searched textures do not follow a predefined pattern. Minimal closed loops of the input graph are computed, and then hierarchically clustered. In this hierarchical clustering, a distance function between two closed loops is defined in terms of their areas difference and boundary resemblance computed by a string matching procedure. Finally it is noted that, when the texture consists of isolated primitive elements, the same method can be used after computing a Voronoi Tesselation of the input graph.
Keywords: Structural Texture, Voronoi, Hierarchical Clustering, String Matching.
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Josep Llados, Horst Bunke and Enric Marti. 1997. Using Cyclic String Matching to Find Rotational and Reflectional Symmetries in Shapes. Intelligent Robots: Sensing, Modeling and Planning. World Scientific Press, 164–179.
Abstract: Dagstuhl Workshop
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Stepan Simsa and 10 others. 2023. Overview of DocILE 2023: Document Information Localization and Extraction. International Conference of the Cross-Language Evaluation Forum for European Languages.276–293. (LNCS.)
Abstract: This paper provides an overview of the DocILE 2023 Competition, its tasks, participant submissions, the competition results and possible future research directions. This first edition of the competition focused on two Information Extraction tasks, Key Information Localization and Extraction (KILE) and Line Item Recognition (LIR). Both of these tasks require detection of pre-defined categories of information in business documents. The second task additionally requires correctly grouping the information into tuples, capturing the structure laid out in the document. The competition used the recently published DocILE dataset and benchmark that stays open to new submissions. The diversity of the participant solutions indicates the potential of the dataset as the submissions included pure Computer Vision, pure Natural Language Processing, as well as multi-modal solutions and utilized all of the parts of the dataset, including the annotated, synthetic and unlabeled subsets.
Keywords: Information Extraction; Computer Vision; Natural Language Processing; Optical Character Recognition; Document Understanding
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Partha Pratim Roy, Josep Llados and Umapada Pal. 2007. Text/Graphics Separation in Color Maps. International Conference on Computing: Theory and Applications.545–551.
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Helena Muñoz, Fernando Vilariño and Dimosthenis Karatzas. 2019. Eye-Movements During Information Extraction from Administrative Documents. International Conference on Document Analysis and Recognition Workshops.6–9.
Abstract: A key aspect of digital mailroom processes is the extraction of relevant information from administrative documents. More often than not, the extraction process cannot be fully automated, and there is instead an important amount of manual intervention. In this work we study the human process of information extraction from invoice document images. We explore whether the gaze of human annotators during an manual information extraction process could be exploited towards reducing the manual effort and automating the process. To this end, we perform an eye-tracking experiment replicating real-life interfaces for information extraction. Through this pilot study we demonstrate that relevant areas in the document can be identified reliably through automatic fixation classification, and the obtained models generalize well to new subjects. Our findings indicate that it is in principle possible to integrate the human in the document image analysis loop, making use of the scanpath to automate the extraction process or verify extracted information.
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