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Giuseppe De Gregorio and 6 others. 2022. A Few Shot Multi-representation Approach for N-Gram Spotting in Historical Manuscripts. Frontiers in Handwriting Recognition. International Conference on Frontiers in Handwriting Recognition (ICFHR2022).3–12. (LNCS.)
Abstract: Despite recent advances in automatic text recognition, the performance remains moderate when it comes to historical manuscripts. This is mainly because of the scarcity of available labelled data to train the data-hungry Handwritten Text Recognition (HTR) models. The Keyword Spotting System (KWS) provides a valid alternative to HTR due to the reduction in error rate, but it is usually limited to a closed reference vocabulary. In this paper, we propose a few-shot learning paradigm for spotting sequences of a few characters (N-gram) that requires a small amount of labelled training data. We exhibit that recognition of important n-grams could reduce the system’s dependency on vocabulary. In this case, an out-of-vocabulary (OOV) word in an input handwritten line image could be a sequence of n-grams that belong to the lexicon. An extensive experimental evaluation of our proposed multi-representation approach was carried out on a subset of Bentham’s historical manuscript collections to obtain some really promising results in this direction.
Keywords: N-gram spotting; Few-shot learning; Multimodal understanding; Historical handwritten collections
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Asma Bensalah, Alicia Fornes, Cristina Carmona_Duarte and Josep Llados. 2022. Easing Automatic Neurorehabilitation via Classification and Smoothness Analysis. Intertwining Graphonomics with Human Movements. 20th International Conference of the International Graphonomics Society, IGS 2022.336–348. (LNCS.)
Abstract: 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.
Keywords: Neurorehabilitation; Upper-lim; Movement classification; Movement smoothness; Deep learning; Jerk
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Alicia Fornes and 11 others. 2022. The RPM3D Project: 3D Kinematics for Remote Patient Monitoring. Intertwining Graphonomics with Human Movements. 20th International Conference of the International Graphonomics Society, IGS 2022.217–226. (LNCS.)
Abstract: 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.
Keywords: Healthcare applications; Kinematic; Theory of Rapid Human Movements; Human activity recognition; Stroke rehabilitation; 3D kinematics
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Arnau Baro, Pau Riba and Alicia Fornes. 2022. Musigraph: Optical Music Recognition Through Object Detection and Graph Neural Network. Frontiers in Handwriting Recognition. International Conference on Frontiers in Handwriting Recognition (ICFHR2022).171–184. (LNCS.)
Abstract: During the last decades, the performance of optical music recognition has been increasingly improving. However, and despite the 2-dimensional nature of music notation (e.g. notes have rhythm and pitch), most works treat musical scores as a sequence of symbols in one dimension, which make their recognition still a challenge. Thus, in this work we explore the use of graph neural networks for musical score recognition. First, because graphs are suited for n-dimensional representations, and second, because the combination of graphs with deep learning has shown a great performance in similar applications. Our methodology consists of: First, we will detect each isolated/atomic symbols (those that can not be decomposed in more graphical primitives) and the primitives that form a musical symbol. Then, we will build the graph taking as root node the notehead and as leaves those primitives or symbols that modify the note’s rhythm (stem, beam, flag) or pitch (flat, sharp, natural). Finally, the graph is translated into a human-readable character sequence for a final transcription and evaluation. Our method has been tested on more than five thousand measures, showing promising results.
Keywords: Object detection; Optical music recognition; Graph neural network
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Emanuele Vivoli, Ali Furkan Biten, Andres Mafla, Dimosthenis Karatzas and Lluis Gomez. 2022. MUST-VQA: MUltilingual Scene-text VQA. Proceedings European Conference on Computer Vision Workshops.345–358. (LNCS.)
Abstract: In this paper, we present a framework for Multilingual Scene Text Visual Question Answering that deals with new languages in a zero-shot fashion. Specifically, we consider the task of Scene Text Visual Question Answering (STVQA) in which the question can be asked in different languages and it is not necessarily aligned to the scene text language. Thus, we first introduce a natural step towards a more generalized version of STVQA: MUST-VQA. Accounting for this, we discuss two evaluation scenarios in the constrained setting, namely IID and zero-shot and we demonstrate that the models can perform on a par on a zero-shot setting. We further provide extensive experimentation and show the effectiveness of adapting multilingual language models into STVQA tasks.
Keywords: Visual question answering; Scene text; Translation robustness; Multilingual models; Zero-shot transfer; Power of language models
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Sergi Garcia Bordils and 7 others. 2022. Out-of-Vocabulary Challenge Report. Proceedings European Conference on Computer Vision Workshops.359–375. (LNCS.)
Abstract: This paper presents final results of the Out-Of-Vocabulary 2022 (OOV) challenge. The OOV contest introduces an important aspect that is not commonly studied by Optical Character Recognition (OCR) models, namely, the recognition of unseen scene text instances at training time. The competition compiles a collection of public scene text datasets comprising of 326,385 images with 4,864,405 scene text instances, thus covering a wide range of data distributions. A new and independent validation and test set is formed with scene text instances that are out of vocabulary at training time. The competition was structured in two tasks, end-to-end and cropped scene text recognition respectively. A thorough analysis of results from baselines and different participants is presented. Interestingly, current state-of-the-art models show a significant performance gap under the newly studied setting. We conclude that the OOV dataset proposed in this challenge will be an essential area to be explored in order to develop scene text models that achieve more robust and generalized predictions.
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Sergi Garcia Bordils and 6 others. 2022. Read While You Drive-Multilingual Text Tracking on the Road. 15th IAPR International workshop on document analysis systems.756–770. (LNCS.)
Abstract: Visual data obtained during driving scenarios usually contain large amounts of text that conveys semantic information necessary to analyse the urban environment and is integral to the traffic control plan. Yet, research on autonomous driving or driver assistance systems typically ignores this information. To advance research in this direction, we present RoadText-3K, a large driving video dataset with fully annotated text. RoadText-3K is three times bigger than its predecessor and contains data from varied geographical locations, unconstrained driving conditions and multiple languages and scripts. We offer a comprehensive analysis of tracking by detection and detection by tracking methods exploring the limits of state-of-the-art text detection. Finally, we propose a new end-to-end trainable tracking model that yields state-of-the-art results on this challenging dataset. Our experiments demonstrate the complexity and variability of RoadText-3K and establish a new, realistic benchmark for scene text tracking in the wild.
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Andrea Gemelli, Sanket Biswas, Enrico Civitelli, Josep Llados and Simone Marinai. 2022. Doc2Graph: A Task Agnostic Document Understanding Framework Based on Graph Neural Networks. 17th European Conference on Computer Vision Workshops.329–344. (LNCS.)
Abstract: Geometric Deep Learning has recently attracted significant interest in a wide range of machine learning fields, including document analysis. The application of Graph Neural Networks (GNNs) has become crucial in various document-related tasks since they can unravel important structural patterns, fundamental in key information extraction processes. Previous works in the literature propose task-driven models and do not take into account the full power of graphs. We propose Doc2Graph, a task-agnostic document understanding framework based on a GNN model, to solve different tasks given different types of documents. We evaluated our approach on two challenging datasets for key information extraction in form understanding, invoice layout analysis and table detection.
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Utkarsh Porwal, Alicia Fornes and Faisal Shafait, eds. 2022. Frontiers in Handwriting Recognition. International Conference on Frontiers in Handwriting Recognition. 18th International Conference, ICFHR 2022. Springer. (LNCS.)
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Pau Torras, Mohamed Ali Souibgui, Sanket Biswas and Alicia Fornes. 2023. Segmentation-Free Alignment of Arbitrary Symbol Transcripts to Images. Document Analysis and Recognition – ICDAR 2023 Workshops.83–93. (LNCS.)
Abstract: Developing arbitrary symbol recognition systems is a challenging endeavour. Even using content-agnostic architectures such as few-shot models, performance can be substantially improved by providing a number of well-annotated examples into training. In some contexts, transcripts of the symbols are available without any position information associated to them, which enables using line-level recognition architectures. A way of providing this position information to detection-based architectures is finding systems that can align the input symbols with the transcription. In this paper we discuss some symbol alignment techniques that are suitable for low-data scenarios and provide an insight on their perceived strengths and weaknesses. In particular, we study the usage of Connectionist Temporal Classification models, Attention-Based Sequence to Sequence models and we compare them with the results obtained on a few-shot recognition system.
Keywords: Historical Manuscripts; Symbol Alignment
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