Arabic and Chinese Handwriting Recognition [electronic resource] :SACH 2006 Summit College Park, MD, USA, September 27-28, 2006 Selected Papers / edited by David Doermann, Stefan Jaeger.
by Doermann, David [editor.]; Jaeger, Stefan [editor.]; SpringerLink (Online service).
Material type:
Item type | Current location | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode |
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TA1637-1638 (Browse shelf) | Available | ||||
TK7882.P3 (Browse shelf) | Available | ||||
Long Loan | MAIN LIBRARY | T385 (Browse shelf) | Available |
Visual Recognition of Arabic Handwriting: Challenges and New Directions -- A Review on Persian Script and Recognition Techniques -- Human Reading Based Strategies for Off-Line Arabic Word Recognition -- Versatile Search of Scanned Arabic Handwriting -- A Two-Tier Arabic Offline Handwriting Recognition Based on Conditional Joining Rules -- Databases and Competitions: Strategies to Improve Arabic Recognition Systems -- Handwritten Chinese Character Recognition: Effects of Shape Normalization and Feature Extraction -- How to Deal with Uncertainty and Variability: Experience and Solutions -- An Efficient Candidate Set Size Reduction Method for Coarse-Classification in Chinese Handwriting Recognition -- Techniques for Solving the Large-Scale Classification Problem in Chinese Handwriting Recognition -- Recent Results of Online Japanese Handwriting Recognition and Its Applications -- Segmentation-Driven Offline Handwritten Chinese and Arabic Script Recognition -- Multi-character Field Recognition for Arabic and Chinese Handwriting -- Multi-lingual Offline Handwriting Recognition Using Hidden Markov Models: A Script-Independent Approach -- Handwritten Character Recognition of Popular South Indian Scripts -- Ensemble Methods to Improve the Performance of an English Handwritten Text Line Recognizer.
The book constitutes the refereed proceedings of the Summit on Arabic and Chinese Handwriting Recognition, SACH 2006, held in College Park, USA, September 27-28, 2006. The 16 revised full papers presented were carefully reviewed and selected from a total of over 60 submissions. The first six papers deal directly with Arabic handwriting together with a short historic survey of the language and techniques used in recognition. Five papers present the current research in Chinese handwriting and three more papers deal with cross cutting methods applied to other languages. The book closes with two articles on recognition of English and south Indian handwriting.
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