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VL
1999
IEEE

Ambiguity in Visual Language Theory and Its Role in Diagram Parsing

13 years 8 months ago
Ambiguity in Visual Language Theory and Its Role in Diagram Parsing
To take advantage of the ever-increasing volume of diagrams in electronic form, it is crucial that we have methods for parsing diagrams. Once a structured, content-based description is built for a diagram, it can be indexed for search, retrieval, and use. Whenever broadcoverage grammars are built to parse a wide range of objects, whether natural language or diagrams, the grammars will overgenerate, giving multiple parses. This is the ambiguity problem. This paper discusses the types of ambiguities that can arise in diagram parsing, as well as techniques to avoid or resolve them. One class of ambiguity is attachment, e.g., the determination of what graphic object is labeled by a text item. Two classes of ambiguities are unique to diagrams: segmentation and occlusion. Examples of segmentation ambiguities include the use of a portion of a single line as an entity itself. Occlusion ambiguities can be difficult to analyze if occlusion is deliberately used to create a novel object from its ...
Robert P. Futrelle
Added 04 Aug 2010
Updated 04 Aug 2010
Type Conference
Year 1999
Where VL
Authors Robert P. Futrelle
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