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Author |
Alloy Das; Sanket Biswas; Ayan Banerjee; Josep Llados; Umapada Pal; Saumik Bhattacharya |
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Title |
Harnessing the Power of Multi-Lingual Datasets for Pre-training: Towards Enhancing Text Spotting Performance |
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Conference Article |
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Year |
2024 |
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Winter Conference on Applications of Computer Vision |
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718-728 |
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The adaptation capability to a wide range of domains is crucial for scene text spotting models when deployed to real-world conditions. However, existing state-of-the-art (SOTA) approaches usually incorporate scene text detection and recognition simply by pretraining on natural scene text datasets, which do not directly exploit the intermediate feature representations between multiple domains. Here, we investigate the problem of domain-adaptive scene text spotting, i.e., training a model on multi-domain source data such that it can directly adapt to target domains rather than being specialized for a specific domain or scenario. Further, we investigate a transformer baseline called Swin-TESTR to focus on solving scene-text spotting for both regular and arbitrary-shaped scene text along with an exhaustive evaluation. The results clearly demonstrate the potential of intermediate representations to achieve significant performance on text spotting benchmarks across multiple domains (e.g. language, synth-to-real, and documents). both in terms of accuracy and efficiency. |
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Waikoloa; Hawai; USA; January 2024 |
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WACV |
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DAG |
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no |
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Admin @ si @ DBB2024 |
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3986 |
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Author |
Lei Kang; Pau Riba; Marçal Rusiñol; Alicia Fornes; Mauricio Villegas |
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Title |
Pay Attention to What You Read: Non-recurrent Handwritten Text-Line Recognition |
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Journal Article |
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Year |
2022 |
Publication |
Pattern Recognition |
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PR |
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Volume |
129 |
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Pages |
108766 |
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The advent of recurrent neural networks for handwriting recognition marked an important milestone reaching impressive recognition accuracies despite the great variability that we observe across different writing styles. Sequential architectures are a perfect fit to model text lines, not only because of the inherent temporal aspect of text, but also to learn probability distributions over sequences of characters and words. However, using such recurrent paradigms comes at a cost at training stage, since their sequential pipelines prevent parallelization. In this work, we introduce a non-recurrent approach to recognize handwritten text by the use of transformer models. We propose a novel method that bypasses any recurrence. By using multi-head self-attention layers both at the visual and textual stages, we are able to tackle character recognition as well as to learn language-related dependencies of the character sequences to be decoded. Our model is unconstrained to any predefined vocabulary, being able to recognize out-of-vocabulary words, i.e. words that do not appear in the training vocabulary. We significantly advance over prior art and demonstrate that satisfactory recognition accuracies are yielded even in few-shot learning scenarios. |
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Sept. 2022 |
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DAG; 600.121; 600.162 |
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Admin @ si @ KRR2022 |
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3556 |
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Author |
Alicia Fornes; Josep Llados; Gemma Sanchez; Horst Bunke |
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Title |
Writer Identification in Old Handwritten Music Scores |
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2012 |
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Pattern Recognition and Signal Processing in Archaeometry: Mathematical and Computational Solutions for Archaeology |
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27-63 |
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The aim of writer identification is determining the writer of a piece of handwriting from a set of writers. In this paper we present a system for writer identification in old handwritten music scores. Even though an important amount of compositions contains handwritten text in the music scores, the aim of our work is to use only music notation to determine the author. The steps of the system proposed are the following. First of all, the music sheet is preprocessed and normalized for obtaining a single binarized music line, without the staff lines. Afterwards, 100 features are extracted for every music line, which are subsequently used in a k-NN classifier that compares every feature vector with prototypes stored in a database. By applying feature selection and extraction methods on the original feature set, the performance is increased. The proposed method has been tested on a database of old music scores from the 17th to 19th centuries, achieving a recognition rate of about 95%. |
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IGI-Global |
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Copnstantin Papaodysseus |
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DAG |
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no |
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Admin @ si @ FLS2012 |
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1828 |
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Author |
Alicia Fornes; Josep Llados; Gemma Sanchez; Xavier Otazu; Horst Bunke |
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Title |
A Combination of Features for Symbol-Independent Writer Identification in Old Music Scores |
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Journal Article |
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Year |
2010 |
Publication |
International Journal on Document Analysis and Recognition |
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IJDAR |
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13 |
Issue |
4 |
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243-259 |
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The aim of writer identification is determining the writer of a piece of handwriting from a set of writers. In this paper, we present an architecture for writer identification in old handwritten music scores. Even though an important amount of music compositions contain handwritten text, the aim of our work is to use only music notation to determine the author. The main contribution is therefore the use of features extracted from graphical alphabets. Our proposal consists in combining the identification results of two different approaches, based on line and textural features. The steps of the ensemble architecture are the following. First of all, the music sheet is preprocessed for removing the staff lines. Then, music lines and texture images are generated for computing line features and textural features. Finally, the classification results are combined for identifying the writer. The proposed method has been tested on a database of old music scores from the seventeenth to nineteenth centuries, achieving a recognition rate of about 92% with 20 writers. |
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Springer-Verlag |
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1433-2833 |
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DAG; CAT;CIC |
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no |
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FLS2010b |
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1319 |
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Author |
Oriol Ramos Terrades; Alejandro Hector Toselli; Nicolas Serrano; Veronica Romero; Enrique Vidal; Alfons Juan |
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Title |
Interactive layout analysis and transcription systems for historic handwritten documents |
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Conference Article |
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Year |
2010 |
Publication |
10th ACM Symposium on Document Engineering |
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219–222 |
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Handwriting recognition; Interactive predictive processing; Partial supervision; Interactive layout analysis |
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The amount of digitized legacy documents has been rising dramatically over the last years due mainly to the increasing number of on-line digital libraries publishing this kind of documents, waiting to be classified and finally transcribed into a textual electronic format (such as ASCII or PDF). Nevertheless, most of the available fully-automatic applications addressing this task are far from being perfect and heavy and inefficient human intervention is often required to check and correct the results of such systems. In contrast, multimodal interactive-predictive approaches may allow the users to participate in the process helping the system to improve the overall performance. With this in mind, two sets of recent advances are introduced in this work: a novel interactive method for text block detection and two multimodal interactive handwritten text transcription systems which use active learning and interactive-predictive technologies in the recognition process. |
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Manchester, United Kingdom |
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ACM |
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DAG |
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no |
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Admin @ si @RTS2010 |
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1857 |
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Author |
Alicia Fornes; Gemma Sanchez |
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Title |
Analysis and Recognition of Music Scores |
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Book Chapter |
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2014 |
Publication |
Handbook of Document Image Processing and Recognition |
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E |
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749-774 |
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The analysis and recognition of music scores has attracted the interest of researchers for decades. Optical Music Recognition (OMR) is a classical research field of Document Image Analysis and Recognition (DIAR), whose aim is to extract information from music scores. Music scores contain both graphical and textual information, and for this reason, techniques are closely related to graphics recognition and text recognition. Since music scores use a particular diagrammatic notation that follow the rules of music theory, many approaches make use of context information to guide the recognition and solve ambiguities. This chapter overviews the main Optical Music Recognition (OMR) approaches. Firstly, the different methods are grouped according to the OMR stages, namely, staff removal, music symbol recognition, and syntactical analysis. Secondly, specific approaches for old and handwritten music scores are reviewed. Finally, online approaches and commercial systems are also commented. |
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Springer London |
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D. Doermann; K. Tombre |
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978-0-85729-860-7 |
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DAG; ADAS; 600.076; 600.077 |
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no |
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Admin @ si @ FoS2014 |
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2484 |
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Author |
Alicia Fornes; Volkmar Frinken; Andreas Fischer; Jon Almazan; G. Jackson; Horst Bunke |
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Title |
A Keyword Spotting Approach Using Blurred Shape Model-Based Descriptors |
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Conference Article |
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2011 |
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Proceedings of the 2011 Workshop on Historical Document Imaging and Processing |
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83-90 |
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The automatic processing of handwritten historical documents is considered a hard problem in pattern recognition. In addition to the challenges given by modern handwritten data, a lack of training data as well as effects caused by the degradation of documents can be observed. In this scenario, keyword spotting arises to be a viable solution to make documents amenable for searching and browsing. For this task we propose the adaptation of shape descriptors used in symbol recognition. By treating each word image as a shape, it can be represented using the Blurred Shape Model and the De-formable Blurred Shape Model. Experiments on the George Washington database demonstrate that this approach is able to outperform the commonly used Dynamic Time Warping approach. |
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ACM |
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978-1-4503-0916-5 |
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HIP |
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DAG |
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no |
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Admin @ si @ FFF2011a |
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1823 |
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Author |
Anders Hast; Alicia Fornes |
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Title |
A Segmentation-free Handwritten Word Spotting Approach by Relaxed Feature Matching |
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Conference Article |
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2016 |
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12th IAPR Workshop on Document Analysis Systems |
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150-155 |
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The automatic recognition of historical handwritten documents is still considered challenging task. For this reason, word spotting emerges as a good alternative for making the information contained in these documents available to the user. Word spotting is defined as the task of retrieving all instances of the query word in a document collection, becoming a useful tool for information retrieval. In this paper we propose a segmentation-free word spotting approach able to deal with large document collections. Our method is inspired on feature matching algorithms that have been applied to image matching and retrieval. Since handwritten words have different shape, there is no exact transformation to be obtained. However, the sufficient degree of relaxation is achieved by using a Fourier based descriptor and an alternative approach to RANSAC called PUMA. The proposed approach is evaluated on historical marriage records, achieving promising results. |
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Santorini; Greece; April 2016 |
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DAG; 602.006; 600.061; 600.077; 600.097 |
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HaF2016 |
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2753 |
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Volkmar Frinken; Andreas Fischer; Markus Baumgartner; Horst Bunke |
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Title |
Keyword spotting for self-training of BLSTM NN based handwriting recognition systems |
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Journal Article |
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Year |
2014 |
Publication |
Pattern Recognition |
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PR |
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47 |
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3 |
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1073-1082 |
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Document retrieval; Keyword spotting; Handwriting recognition; Neural networks; Semi-supervised learning |
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The automatic transcription of unconstrained continuous handwritten text requires well trained recognition systems. The semi-supervised paradigm introduces the concept of not only using labeled data but also unlabeled data in the learning process. Unlabeled data can be gathered at little or not cost. Hence it has the potential to reduce the need for labeling training data, a tedious and costly process. Given a weak initial recognizer trained on labeled data, self-training can be used to recognize unlabeled data and add words that were recognized with high confidence to the training set for re-training. This process is not trivial and requires great care as far as selecting the elements that are to be added to the training set is concerned. In this paper, we propose to use a bidirectional long short-term memory neural network handwritten recognition system for keyword spotting in order to select new elements. A set of experiments shows the high potential of self-training for bootstrapping handwriting recognition systems, both for modern and historical handwritings, and demonstrate the benefits of using keyword spotting over previously published self-training schemes. |
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DAG; 600.077; 602.101 |
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Admin @ si @ FFB2014 |
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2297 |
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Author |
Antonio Clavelli; Dimosthenis Karatzas; Josep Llados |
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Title |
A framework for the assessment of text extraction algorithms on complex colour images |
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Conference Article |
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2010 |
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9th IAPR International Workshop on Document Analysis Systems |
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19–26 |
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The availability of open, ground-truthed datasets and clear performance metrics is a crucial factor in the development of an application domain. The domain of colour text image analysis (real scenes, Web and spam images, scanned colour documents) has traditionally suffered from a lack of a comprehensive performance evaluation framework. Such a framework is extremely difficult to specify, and corresponding pixel-level accurate information tedious to define. In this paper we discuss the challenges and technical issues associated with developing such a framework. Then, we describe a complete framework for the evaluation of text extraction methods at multiple levels, provide a detailed ground-truth specification and present a case study on how this framework can be used in a real-life situation. |
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Boston; USA; |
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978-1-60558-773-8 |
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DAG @ dag @ CKL2010 |
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1432 |
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