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Salvatore Tabbone and Oriol Ramos Terrades. 2014. An Overview of Symbol Recognition. In D. Doermann and K. Tombre, eds. Handbook of Document Image Processing and Recognition. Springer London, 523–551.
Abstract: According to the Cambridge Dictionaries Online, a symbol is a sign, shape, or object that is used to represent something else. Symbol recognition is a subfield of general pattern recognition problems that focuses on identifying, detecting, and recognizing symbols in technical drawings, maps, or miscellaneous documents such as logos and musical scores. This chapter aims at providing the reader an overview of the different existing ways of describing and recognizing symbols and how the field has evolved to attain a certain degree of maturity.
Keywords: Pattern recognition; Shape descriptors; Structural descriptors; Symbolrecognition; Symbol spotting
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A.Kesidis and Dimosthenis Karatzas. 2014. Logo and Trademark Recognition. In D. Doermann and K. Tombre, eds. Handbook of Document Image Processing and Recognition. Springer London, 591–646.
Abstract: The importance of logos and trademarks in nowadays society is indisputable, variably seen under a positive light as a valuable service for consumers or a negative one as a catalyst of ever-increasing consumerism. This chapter discusses the technical approaches for enabling machines to work with logos, looking into the latest methodologies for logo detection, localization, representation, recognition, retrieval, and spotting in a variety of media. This analysis is presented in the context of three different applications covering the complete depth and breadth of state of the art techniques. These are trademark retrieval systems, logo recognition in document images, and logo detection and removal in images and videos. This chapter, due to the very nature of logos and trademarks, brings together various facets of document image analysis spanning graphical and textual content, while it links document image analysis to other computer vision domains, especially when it comes to the analysis of real-scene videos and images.
Keywords: Logo recognition; Logo removal; Logo spotting; Trademark registration; Trademark retrieval systems
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Albert Gordo, Florent Perronnin and Ernest Valveny. 2012. Document classification using multiple views. 10th IAPR International Workshop on Document Analysis Systems. IEEE Computer Society Washington, 33–37.
Abstract: The combination of multiple features or views when representing documents or other kinds of objects usually leads to improved results in classification (and retrieval) tasks. Most systems assume that those views will be available both at training and test time. However, some views may be too `expensive' to be available at test time. In this paper, we consider the use of Canonical Correlation Analysis to leverage `expensive' views that are available only at training time. Experimental results show that this information may significantly improve the results in a classification task.
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Jon Almazan, Alicia Fornes and Ernest Valveny. 2011. A Non-Rigid Feature Extraction Method for Shape Recognition. 11th International Conference on Document Analysis and Recognition.987–991.
Abstract: This paper presents a methodology for shape recognition that focuses on dealing with the difficult problem of large deformations. The proposed methodology consists in a novel feature extraction technique, which uses a non-rigid representation adaptable to the shape. This technique employs a deformable grid based on the computation of geometrical centroids that follows a region partitioning algorithm. Then, a feature vector is extracted by computing pixel density measures around these geometrical centroids. The result is a shape descriptor that adapts its representation to the given shape and encodes the pixel density distribution. The validity of the method when dealing with large deformations has been experimentally shown over datasets composed of handwritten shapes. It has been applied to signature verification and shape recognition tasks demonstrating high accuracy and low computational cost.
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Lluis Pere de las Heras, Joan Mas, Gemma Sanchez and Ernest Valveny. 2011. Wall Patch-Based Segmentation in Architectural Floorplans. 11th International Conference on Document Analysis and Recognition.1270–1274.
Abstract: Segmentation of architectural floor plans is a challenging task, mainly because of the large variability in the notation between different plans. In general, traditional techniques, usually based on analyzing and grouping structural primitives obtained by vectorization, are only able to handle a reduced range of similar notations. In this paper we propose an alternative patch-based segmentation approach working at pixel level, without need of vectorization. The image is divided into a set of patches and a set of features is extracted for every patch. Then, each patch is assigned to a visual word of a previously learned vocabulary and given a probability of belonging to each class of objects. Finally, a post-process assigns the final label for every pixel. This approach has been applied to the detection of walls on two datasets of architectural floor plans with different notations, achieving high accuracy rates.
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Alicia Fornes, Anjan Dutta, Albert Gordo and Josep Llados. 2011. The ICDAR 2011 Music Scores Competition: Staff Removal and Writer Identification. 11th International Conference on Document Analysis and Recognition.1511–1515.
Abstract: In the last years, there has been a growing interest in the analysis of handwritten music scores. In this sense, our goal has been to foster the interest in the analysis of handwritten music scores by the proposal of two different competitions: Staff removal and Writer Identification. Both competitions have been tested on the CVC-MUSCIMA database: a ground-truth of handwritten music score images. This paper describes the competition details, including the dataset and ground-truth, the evaluation metrics, and a short description of the participants, their methods, and the obtained results.
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Josep Llados, Ernest Valveny, Gemma Sanchez and Enric Marti. 2003. A Case Study of Pattern Recognition: Symbol Recognition in Graphic Documentsa. Proceedings of Pattern Recognition in Information Systems. ICEIS Press, 1–13.
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Josep Llados. 2006. Computer Vision: Progress of Research and Development.
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Josep Llados, Ernest Valveny and Enric Marti. 2000. Symbol Recognition in Document Image Analysis: Methods and Challenges. Recent Research Developments in Pattern Recognition, Transworld Research Network,, 1, 151–178.
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Josep Llados, Ernest Valveny, Gemma Sanchez and Enric Marti. 2002. Symbol recognition: current advances and perspectives. In Dorothea Blostein and Young- Bin Kwon, ed. Graphics Recognition Algorithms And Applications. Springer-Verlag, 104–128. (LNCS.)
Abstract: The recognition of symbols in graphic documents is an intensive research activity in the community of pattern recognition and document analysis. A key issue in the interpretation of maps, engineering drawings, diagrams, etc. is the recognition of domain dependent symbols according to a symbol database. In this work we first review the most outstanding symbol recognition methods from two different points of view: application domains and pattern recognition methods. In the second part of the paper, open and unaddressed problems involved in symbol recognition are described, analyzing their current state of art and discussing future research challenges. Thus, issues such as symbol representation, matching, segmentation, learning, scalability of recognition methods and performance evaluation are addressed in this work. Finally, we discuss the perspectives of symbol recognition concerning to new paradigms such as user interfaces in handheld computers or document database and WWW indexing by graphical content.
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