On-line Japanese character recognition based on flexible pattern matching method using normalization-cooperative feature extraction

ISSN: 09168532
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Abstract

This paper shows that when a pattern matching method used in optical character readers is highly accurate, it can be used effectively in on-line Japanese character recognition. Stroke matching methods used in previous conventional on-line character recognition have restricted the number and the order of strokes. On the other hand, orientation-feature pattern matching methods avoid these restrictions. The authors have improved a pattern matching method with the development in the flexible pattern matching (FPM) method, based on nonlinear shape normalization and nonlinear pattern matching, which includes the normalization-cooperative feature extraction (NCFE) method. These improvements have increased the recognition rate from 81.9% to 95.9%, when applied to the off-line database ETL-9 from the Electrotechnical Laboratory, Japan. When applied on-line to the examination of 151,533 Kanji and Hiragana characters in 3,036 categories, the recognition rate achieved 94.0%, while the cumulative recognition rate within the best ten candidates was 99.1%.

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Hamanaka, M., Yamada, K., & Tsukumo, J. (1994). On-line Japanese character recognition based on flexible pattern matching method using normalization-cooperative feature extraction. IEICE Transactions on Information and Systems, E77-D(7), 825–831.

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