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Author |
Asma Bensalah; Alicia Fornes; Cristina Carmona_Duarte; Josep Llados |
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Title |
Easing Automatic Neurorehabilitation via Classification and Smoothness Analysis |
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Conference Article |
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2022 |
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Intertwining Graphonomics with Human Movements. 20th International Conference of the International Graphonomics Society, IGS 2022 |
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13424 |
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336-348 |
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Neurorehabilitation; Upper-lim; Movement classification; Movement smoothness; Deep learning; Jerk |
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Assessing the quality of movements for post-stroke patients during the rehabilitation phase is vital given that there is no standard stroke rehabilitation plan for all the patients. In fact, it depends basically on the patient’s functional independence and its progress along the rehabilitation sessions. To tackle this challenge and make neurorehabilitation more agile, we propose an automatic assessment pipeline that starts by recognising patients’ movements by means of a shallow deep learning architecture, then measuring the movement quality using jerk measure and related measures. A particularity of this work is that the dataset used is clinically relevant, since it represents movements inspired from Fugl-Meyer a well common upper-limb clinical stroke assessment scale for stroke patients. We show that it is possible to detect the contrast between healthy and patients movements in terms of smoothness, besides achieving conclusions about the patients’ progress during the rehabilitation sessions that correspond to the clinicians’ findings about each case. |
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June 7-9, 2022, Las Palmas de Gran Canaria, Spain |
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DAG; 600.121; 600.162; 602.230; 600.140 |
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Admin @ si @ BFC2022 |
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3738 |
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Alicia Fornes; Asma Bensalah; Cristina Carmona_Duarte; Jialuo Chen; Miguel A. Ferrer; Andreas Fischer; Josep Llados; Cristina Martin; Eloy Opisso; Rejean Plamondon; Anna Scius-Bertrand; Josep Maria Tormos |
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The RPM3D Project: 3D Kinematics for Remote Patient Monitoring |
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Conference Article |
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2022 |
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Intertwining Graphonomics with Human Movements. 20th International Conference of the International Graphonomics Society, IGS 2022 |
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13424 |
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217-226 |
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Healthcare applications; Kinematic; Theory of Rapid Human Movements; Human activity recognition; Stroke rehabilitation; 3D kinematics |
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This project explores the feasibility of remote patient monitoring based on the analysis of 3D movements captured with smartwatches. We base our analysis on the Kinematic Theory of Rapid Human Movement. We have validated our research in a real case scenario for stroke rehabilitation at the Guttmann Institute (https://www.guttmann.com/en/) (neurorehabilitation hospital), showing promising results. Our work could have a great impact in remote healthcare applications, improving the medical efficiency and reducing the healthcare costs. Future steps include more clinical validation, developing multi-modal analysis architectures (analysing data from sensors, images, audio, etc.), and exploring the application of our technology to monitor other neurodegenerative diseases. |
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June 7-9, 2022, Las Palmas de Gran Canaria, Spain |
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DAG; 600.121; 600.162; 602.230; 600.140 |
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Admin @ si @ FBC2022 |
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3739 |
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Author |
David Aldavert |
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Title |
Efficient and Scalable Handwritten Word Spotting on Historical Documents using Bag of Visual Words |
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2021 |
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PhD Thesis, Universitat Autonoma de Barcelona-CVC |
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Word spotting can be defined as the pattern recognition tasked aimed at locating and retrieving a specific keyword within a document image collection without explicitly transcribing the whole corpus. Its use is particularly interesting when applied in scenarios where Optical Character Recognition performs poorly or can not be used at all. This thesis focuses on such a scenario, word spotting on historical handwritten documents that have been written by a single author or by multiple authors with a similar calligraphy.
This problem requires a visual signature that is robust to image artifacts, flexible to accommodate script variations and efficient to retrieve information in a rapid manner. For this, we have developed a set of word spotting methods that on their foundation use the well known Bag-of-Visual-Words (BoVW) representation. This representation has gained popularity among the document image analysis community to characterize handwritten words
in an unsupervised manner. However, most approaches on this field rely on a basic BoVW configuration and disregard complex encoding and spatial representations. We determine which BoVW configurations provide the best performance boost to a spotting system.
Then, we extend the segmentation-based word spotting, where word candidates are given a priori, to segmentation-free spotting. The proposed approach seeds the document images with overlapping word location candidates and characterizes them with a BoVW signature. Retrieval is achieved comparing the query and candidate signatures and returning the locations that provide a higher consensus. This is a simple but powerful approach that requires a more compact signature than in a segmentation-based scenario. We first
project the BoVW signature into a reduced semantic topics space and then compress it further using Product Quantizers. The resulting signature only requires a few dozen bytes, allowing us to index thousands of pages on a common desktop computer. The final system still yields a performance comparable to the state-of-the-art despite all the information loss during the compression phases.
Afterwards, we also study how to combine different modalities of information in order to create a query-by-X spotting system where, words are indexed using an information modality and queries are retrieved using another. We consider three different information modalities: visual, textual and audio. Our proposal is to create a latent feature space where features which are semantically related are projected onto the same topics. Creating thus a new feature space where information from different modalities can be compared. Later, we consider the codebook generation and descriptor encoding problem. The codebooks used to encode the BoVW signatures are usually created using an unsupervised clustering algorithm and, they require to test multiple parameters to determine which configuration is best for a certain document collection. We propose a semantic clustering algorithm which allows to estimate the best parameter from data. Since gather annotated data is costly, we use synthetically generated word images. The resulting codebook is database agnostic, i. e. a codebook that yields a good performance on document collections that use the same script. We also propose the use of an additional codebook to approximate descriptors and reduce the descriptor encoding
complexity to sub-linear.
Finally, we focus on the problem of signatures dimensionality. We propose a new symbol probability signature where each bin represents the probability that a certain symbol is present a certain location of the word image. This signature is extremely compact and combined with compression techniques can represent word images with just a few bytes per signature. |
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April 2021 |
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Ph.D. thesis |
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Ediciones Graficas Rey |
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Marçal Rusiñol;Josep Llados |
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978-84-122714-5-4 |
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DAG; 600.121;ADAS |
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Admin @ si @ Ald2021 |
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3601 |
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Author |
S.K. Jemni; Mohamed Ali Souibgui; Yousri Kessentini; Alicia Fornes |
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Title |
Enhance to Read Better: A Multi-Task Adversarial Network for Handwritten Document Image Enhancement |
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Journal Article |
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2022 |
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Pattern Recognition |
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PR |
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123 |
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108370 |
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Handwritten document images can be highly affected by degradation for different reasons: Paper ageing, daily-life scenarios (wrinkles, dust, etc.), bad scanning process and so on. These artifacts raise many readability issues for current Handwritten Text Recognition (HTR) algorithms and severely devalue their efficiency. In this paper, we propose an end to end architecture based on Generative Adversarial Networks (GANs) to recover the degraded documents into a and form. Unlike the most well-known document binarization methods, which try to improve the visual quality of the degraded document, the proposed architecture integrates a handwritten text recognizer that promotes the generated document image to be more readable. To the best of our knowledge, this is the first work to use the text information while binarizing handwritten documents. Extensive experiments conducted on degraded Arabic and Latin handwritten documents demonstrate the usefulness of integrating the recognizer within the GAN architecture, which improves both the visual quality and the readability of the degraded document images. Moreover, we outperform the state of the art in H-DIBCO challenges, after fine tuning our pre-trained model with synthetically degraded Latin handwritten images, on this task. |
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DAG; 600.124; 600.121; 602.230 |
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Admin @ si @ JSK2022 |
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3613 |
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Marçal Rusiñol; Lluis Gomez; A. Landman; M. Silva Constenla; Dimosthenis Karatzas |
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Title |
Automatic Structured Text Reading for License Plates and Utility Meters |
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Conference Article |
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2019 |
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BMVC Workshop on Visual Artificial Intelligence and Entrepreneurship |
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Reading text in images has attracted interest from computer vision researchers for
many years. Our technology focuses on the extraction of structured text – such as serial
numbers, machine readings, product codes, etc. – so that it is able to center its attention just on the relevant textual elements. It is conceived to work in an end-to-end fashion, bypassing any explicit text segmentation stage. In this paper we present two different industrial use cases where we have applied our automatic structured text reading technology. In the first one, we demonstrate an outstanding performance when reading license plates compared to the current state of the art. In the second one, we present results on our solution for reading utility meters. The technology is commercialized by a recently created spin-off company, and both solutions are at different stages of integration with final clients. |
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Cardiff; UK; September 2019 |
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BMVC-VAIE19 |
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DAG; 600.129 |
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Admin @ si @ RGL2019 |
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3283 |
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Zheng Huang; Kai Chen; Jianhua He; Xiang Bai; Dimosthenis Karatzas; Shijian Lu; CV Jawahar |
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Title |
ICDAR2019 Competition on Scanned Receipt OCR and Information Extraction |
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Conference Article |
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2019 |
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15th International Conference on Document Analysis and Recognition |
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1516-1520 |
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The ICDAR 2019 Challenge on “Scanned receipts OCR and key information extraction” (SROIE) covers important aspects related to the automated analysis of scanned receipts. The SROIE tasks play a key role in many document analysis systems and hold significant commercial potential. Although a lot of work has been published over the years on administrative document analysis, the community has advanced relatively slowly, as most datasets have been kept private. One of the key contributions of SROIE to the document analysis community is to offer a first, standardized dataset of 1000 whole scanned receipt images and annotations, as well as an evaluation procedure for such tasks. The Challenge is structured around three tasks, namely Scanned Receipt Text Localization (Task 1), Scanned Receipt OCR (Task 2) and Key Information Extraction from Scanned Receipts (Task 3). The competition opened on 10th February, 2019 and closed on 5th May, 2019. We received 29, 24 and 18 valid submissions received for the three competition tasks, respectively. This report presents the competition datasets, define the tasks and the evaluation protocols, offer detailed submission statistics, as well as an analysis of the submitted performance. While the tasks of text localization and recognition seem to be relatively easy to tackle, it is interesting to observe the variety of ideas and approaches proposed for the information extraction task. According to the submissions' performance we believe there is still margin for improving information extraction performance, although the current dataset would have to grow substantially in following editions. Given the success of the SROIE competition evidenced by the wide interest generated and the healthy number of submissions from academic, research institutes and industry over different countries, we consider that the SROIE competition can evolve into a useful resource for the community, drawing further attention and promoting research and development efforts in this field. |
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Sydney; Australia; September 2019 |
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ICDAR |
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DAG; 600.129 |
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Admin @ si @ HCH2019 |
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3338 |
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Dena Bazazian; Dimosthenis Karatzas; Andrew Bagdanov |
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Title |
Word Spotting in Scene Images based on Character Recognition |
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2018 |
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IEEE/CVF Conference on Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition Workshops |
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1872-1874 |
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In this paper we address the problem of unconstrained Word Spotting in scene images. We train a Fully Convolutional Network to produce heatmaps of all the character classes. Then, we employ the Text Proposals approach and, via a rectangle classifier, detect the most likely rectangle for each query word based on the character attribute maps. We evaluate the proposed method on ICDAR2015 and show that it is capable of identifying and recognizing query words in natural scene images. |
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Salt Lake City; USA; June 2018 |
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CVPRW |
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DAG; 600.129; 600.121 |
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BKB2018a |
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3179 |
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Rui Zhang; Yongsheng Zhou; Qianyi Jiang; Qi Song; Nan Li; Kai Zhou; Lei Wang; Dong Wang; Minghui Liao; Mingkun Yang; Xiang Bai; Baoguang Shi; Dimosthenis Karatzas; Shijian Lu; CV Jawahar |
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ICDAR 2019 Robust Reading Challenge on Reading Chinese Text on Signboard |
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Conference Article |
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2019 |
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15th International Conference on Document Analysis and Recognition |
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1577-1581 |
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Chinese scene text reading is one of the most challenging problems in computer vision and has attracted great interest. Different from English text, Chinese has more than 6000 commonly used characters and Chinesecharacters can be arranged in various layouts with numerous fonts. The Chinese signboards in street view are a good choice for Chinese scene text images since they have different backgrounds, fonts and layouts. We organized a competition called ICDAR2019-ReCTS, which mainly focuses on reading Chinese text on signboard. This report presents the final results of the competition. A large-scale dataset of 25,000 annotated signboard images, in which all the text lines and characters are annotated with locations and transcriptions, were released. Four tasks, namely character recognition, text line recognition, text line detection and end-to-end recognition were set up. Besides, considering the Chinese text ambiguity issue, we proposed a multi ground truth (multi-GT) evaluation method to make evaluation fairer. The competition started on March 1, 2019 and ended on April 30, 2019. 262 submissions from 46 teams are received. Most of the participants come from universities, research institutes, and tech companies in China. There are also some participants from the United States, Australia, Singapore, and Korea. 21 teams submit results for Task 1, 23 teams submit results for Task 2, 24 teams submit results for Task 3, and 13 teams submit results for Task 4. |
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Sydney; Australia; September 2019 |
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ICDAR |
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DAG; 600.129; 600.121 |
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Admin @ si @ LZZ2019 |
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3335 |
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Mohammed Al Rawi; Ernest Valveny; Dimosthenis Karatzas |
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Can One Deep Learning Model Learn Script-Independent Multilingual Word-Spotting? |
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Conference Article |
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2019 |
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15th International Conference on Document Analysis and Recognition |
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260-267 |
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Word spotting has gained increased attention lately as it can be used to extract textual information from handwritten documents and scene-text images. Current word spotting approaches are designed to work on a single language and/or script. Building intelligent models that learn script-independent multilingual word-spotting is challenging due to the large variability of multilingual alphabets and symbols. We used ResNet-152 and the Pyramidal Histogram of Characters (PHOC) embedding to build a one-model script-independent multilingual word-spotting and we tested it on Latin, Arabic, and Bangla (Indian) languages. The one-model we propose performs on par with the multi-model language-specific word-spotting system, and thus, reduces the number of models needed for each script and/or language. |
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Sydney; Australia; September 2019 |
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ICDAR |
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DAG; 600.129; 600.121 |
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Admin @ si @ RVK2019 |
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3337 |
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Yipeng Sun; Zihan Ni; Chee-Kheng Chng; Yuliang Liu; Canjie Luo; Chun Chet Ng; Junyu Han; Errui Ding; Jingtuo Liu; Dimosthenis Karatzas; Chee Seng Chan; Lianwen Jin |
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ICDAR 2019 Competition on Large-Scale Street View Text with Partial Labeling – RRC-LSVT |
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Conference Article |
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2019 |
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15th International Conference on Document Analysis and Recognition |
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1557-1562 |
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Robust text reading from street view images provides valuable information for various applications. Performance improvement of existing methods in such a challenging scenario heavily relies on the amount of fully annotated training data, which is costly and in-efficient to obtain. To scale up the amount of training data while keeping the labeling procedure cost-effective, this competition introduces a new challenge on Large-scale Street View Text with Partial Labeling (LSVT), providing 50, 000 and 400, 000 images in full and weak annotations, respectively. This competition aims to explore the abilities of state-of-the-art methods to detect and recognize text instances from large-scale street view images, closing the gap between research benchmarks and real applications. During the competition period, a total of 41 teams participated in the two proposed tasks with 132 valid submissions, ie, text detection and end-to-end text spotting. This paper includes dataset descriptions, task definitions, evaluation protocols and results summaries of the ICDAR 2019-LSVT challenge. |
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Sydney; Australia; September 2019 |
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ICDAR |
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DAG; 600.129; 600.121 |
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Admin @ si @ SNC2019 |
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3339 |
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