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ICDAR
2011
IEEE

Segmentation and Normalisation in Grapheme Codebooks

12 years 3 months ago
Segmentation and Normalisation in Grapheme Codebooks
Abstract—The grapheme codebook is a high-performing technique for offline writer identification. This paper considers whether the de facto standards for initial grapheme extraction are optimal for both modern and historical datasets. We examine the construction and representation of the graphemes that comprise the codebook, testing three segmentation methods and two grapheme size normalisation methods on two datasets: a 93-writer IAM dataset, and a 43-writer medieval English dataset. The standard minima-split segmentation is compared to a complementary segmentation method that preserves ligature shapes, as well as the union of both these methods. Classification performance for each method is compared on a range of codebook sizes. We demonstrate that grapheme aspect-ratio is not always a writerspecific feature, and that preserving the character body shape in segmentation is more informative than preserving cursive text ligatures.
Tara Gilliam, Richard C. Wilson, John A. Clark
Added 24 Dec 2011
Updated 24 Dec 2011
Type Journal
Year 2011
Where ICDAR
Authors Tara Gilliam, Richard C. Wilson, John A. Clark
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