Résumé

The accessibility to handwritten historical documents is often constrained by the limited feasibility of automatic full transcriptions. Keyword Spotting (KWS), that allows to retrieve arbitrary query words from documents, has been proposed as alternative. In the present paper, we make use of graphs for representing word images. The actual keyword spotting is thus based on matching a query graph with all documents graphs. However, even with relative fast approximation algorithms the shear amount of matchings might limit the practical application of this approach. For this reason we present two novel filters with linear time complexity that allow to substantially reduce the number of graph matchings actually required. In particular, these filters estimate a graph dissimilarity between a query graph and all document graphs based on their node and edge distribution in a polar coordinate system. Eventually, all graphs from the document with distributions that differ to heavily from the query’s node/edge distribution are eliminated. In an experimental evaluation on four different historical documents, we show that about 90% of the matchings can be omitted, while the KWS accuracy is not negatively affected.

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