DocumentCode
2541775
Title
An interval approach to handwriting recognition
Author
Karbou, F. ; Karbou, F.
Author_Institution
Sale, Morocco
fYear
2000
fDate
2000
Firstpage
153
Lastpage
157
Abstract
A language is a set of symbols, signs, sounds, .... Each language has its own signs (Arab, Japanese, Latin....) that people discern easily. In fact, one gives these symbols (isolated or regrouped in a words or sentences) senses or meaning. It is a means of communication to describe our desires, our thought, our needs, .... Nevertheless, there are always basic references through which one communicates. These references are not fixed. They evolve with time, knowledge, experience.... Thus, machines “which understand human languages” have to recognize a given situation “in different sentences”. This language can be written (handwritten recognition) or spoken (signal processing) or with gestures (computer vision) and grimaces (face recognition). In this paper, one is interested in the handwriting recognition which is one of the most difficult problems because of the diversity, and the no homogeneity of writing. In fact, to solve this problem, one is going to use the notion of references excessively
Keywords
handwriting recognition; natural languages; handwriting recognition; interval approach; language; understand human languages; Character recognition; Computer vision; Face recognition; Handicapped aids; Handwriting recognition; Humans; Natural languages; Prototypes; Shape control; Signal processing;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Fuzzy Information Processing Society, 2000. NAFIPS. 19th International Conference of the North American
Conference_Location
Atlanta, GA
Print_ISBN
0-7803-6274-8
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/NAFIPS.2000.877410
Filename
877410
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