Abstract

A recognition scheme for reading handwritten cursive words using three word recognition techniques is described. The focus is on the implementation used to combine the three techniques based on a comparative study of different strategies. The first holistic recognition technique derives a global encoding of the word. The other techniques both rely on the segmentation of the word into letters, but differ in the character classifier they use. The former runs a statistical linear classifier, and the latter runs a neural network with a different representation of the input data. The testing, comparison, and combination studies have been performed on word images from mail provided by the USPS. The top choice recognition rates achieved so far correspond to 88%, 76%, 65% with respect to lexicon sizes of 10, 100, and 1000 words. >

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