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Grant for querying handwritten document images

15 April 2015

Lambert Schomaker, Professor in Artificial Intelligence , received a European/NWO grant of 147 kEUR for the project HIMANIS Historical MANuscript Indexing for user-controlled Search. Manuscripts are among the most important witnesses to our European shared cultural heritage. Yet, the wealth of information conveyed by the text captured in these images remains largely inaccessible. The project HIMANIS aims at developing cost-effective solutions for querying handwritten document images.

In recent years, large quantities of historical handwritten documents are being scanned and made available through web portals. Yet, the wealth of information conveyed by the text captured in these images remains largely inaccessible. General users and researchers more and more expect to query handwritten resources in plain text like printed books, but current handwritten text recognition technology is still far from offering sufficiently accurate transcripts on historical documents.

Prof. Lambert Schomaker
Prof. Lambert Schomaker

This situation raises the need of searching approaches specifically designed for text images. HIMANIS aims at developing cost-effective solutions for querying large sets of handwritten document images. To this end, innovative keyword spotting, indexing and search methods will be developed, tested, adapted and/or scaled up to meet the realworld conditions required.
HIMANIS will associate Computer Science (A2iA, UPVLC and RUG), Humanities (IRHT) and Cultural Heritage (The European Library, the Archives Nationales of France and Bibliothque Nationale de France) institutions and produce technology to generate new, research-based knowledge from historical manuscripts.

As a challenging and particularly interesting case study, the large collection of registers produced by the French royal chancery (14th-15th c.) will be used as a test bed. This will allow sustainable use and management of this important cultural resource. Implementing user feedback will also increase our understanding of the meanings that it holds for people and how they perceive, use and interpret it, thereby meeting societal challenges in promoting its use and re-use.

Last modified:01 February 2017 12.45 a.m.

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