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Extracting Text From Real-World Scenes

J. Patrick Bixler, David Miller

Year
1989
Citations
1

Abstract

Many scenes contain significant textual information that can be extremely helpful for understanding and/or navigation. For example, text-based information can frequently be the primary cure used for navigating inside buildings. One might first read a marquee, then look for an appropriate hallway and walk along reading door signs and nameplates until the destination is found. Optical character recognition has been studied extensively in recent years, but has been applied almost exclusively to printed documents. As these techniques improve it becomes reasonable to ask whether they can be applied to an arbitrary scene in an attempt to extract text-based information. Before an automated system can be expected to navigate by reading signs, however, the text must first be segmented from the rest of the scene. This paper discusses the feasibility of extracting text from an arbitrary scene and using that information to guide the navigation of a mobile robot. We consider some simple techniques for first locating text components and then tracking the individual characters to form words and phrases. Results for some sample images are also presented.

Keywords

Computer scienceCharacter (mathematics)Artificial intelligenceReading (process)Computer visionTracking (education)Sample (material)Rest (music)Optical character recognitionNatural language processing

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