Abstract
Map labels provide valuable geographic information by annotating geographic phenomenona with text descriptions. However, many interesting and useful maps are only available as images and hence this information is not readily accessible in a Geographic Information System (GIS). Previous work on text recognition in maps considers maps as a special type of image to be processed using Optical Character Recognition (OCR) techniques and does not pay attention to the typical workflows in a GIS. As a result, to convert map labels into machine-readable text, a user has to switch between OCR and GIS software, transform the detected text locations from the image coordinates (in OCR) to the map coordinates (in GIS), and apply data import/export procedures. This tedious process limits the opportunity to access text information in maps. This paper presents ArcStrabo, an integration of our previous text recognition work and a GIS, which uses a GIS user interface, workflows, and data types to enable efficient training of text recognition algorithms for converting map labels to a table of geographic names. We show that ArcStrabo facilitates map digitization processes, eliminates the need for GIS users to learn additional OCR tools, and does not require manual data export/import procedures between GIS and OCR software.
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