DocumentCode
1949996
Title
Multiple knowledge sources for word recognition
Author
Bellaby, G.J. ; Evett, L.J. ; Powalka, R.K.
Author_Institution
Dept. of Comput., Nottingham Trent Univ., UK
fYear
1996
fDate
35208
Firstpage
42614
Lastpage
42616
Abstract
It is not possible to get complete disambiguation of handwriting from pattern recognition alone since a written word can be interpreted in a number of different ways. The combination of several sources of information, each of which is capable of extracting a different characteristic of cursive handwriting, is more likely to be successful than pattern recognition alone. The way to produce a machine system which is both discriminatory and robust (target found even when it is not top ranked) is to combine different, but complementary recognition methods. It is only by integrating different sources of information that a stronger, more robust, machine system can be developed. Three sources of information are considered in the present paper: character-segmentation information, word shape information and lexical information. The methods used to extract these three sources of information are, respectively, a traditional pattern recognizer, a whole word recognizer and a method which uses word level contextual cues
Keywords
handwriting recognition; optical character recognition; character-segmentation information; cursive handwriting; lexical information; multiple knowledge sources; pattern recognition; word recognition; word shape information; word-level contextual cues;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
iet
Conference_Titel
Handwriting Analysis and Recognition - A European Perspective, IEE Workshop on
Conference_Location
London
Type
conf
DOI
10.1049/ic:19960929
Filename
543762
Link To Document