Abstract
Visual disabled Ethiopians find great difficulty in recognizing banknotes. Each Ethiopian banknote has an identical feel, with no Braille markings, irregular edges, or other tangible features that make it easily recognizable by blind persons. In Ethiopia, there's only one device available that will assist blind people to acknowledge their notes. Internationally, there are devices available; however, they're expensive, complex, and haven't been developed to cater to Ethiopian currency. Because of these facts, visually impaired people may suffer from recognizing each folding money. This fact necessitates a higher authentication and verification system that will help visually disabled people to simply identify and recognize the banknotes. This paper presents a denomination-specific component-based framework for a banknote recognition system. Within the study, the dominant color of the banknotes was first identified and so the exclusive feature for every denomination-specific ROI was calculated. Finally, the Colour-Momentum, dominant color, and GLCM features were calculated from each denomination-specific ROI. Designing the recognition system by thereby considering the denomination-specific ROI is simpler as compared to considering the entire note in collecting more class-specific information and robust in copying with partial occlusion and viewpoint changes. The performance of the proposed model was verified by using a larger dataset of which containing banknotes in several conditions including occlusion, cluttered background, rotation, and changes of illumination, scaling, and viewpoints. The proposed algorithm achieves a 98% recognition rate on our challenging datasets.
Highlights
According to World Blind Union (WBU), there were 61 million visually impaired people around the world in 2002, which is about 2.6% of the total population
As a matter of fact, visually impaired people face a number of challenges when interacting with the environment
The monetary features of each ROI are extracted by GLCM and color moments
Summary
According to World Blind Union (WBU), there were 61 million visually impaired people around the world in 2002, which is about 2.6% of the total population. Among these people, 124 million were registered to have low vision and 37 million were blind [30,16]. As a matter of fact, visually impaired people face a number of challenges when interacting with the environment. Due to this, such information is visually encoded in their daily life. With a few recent exceptions, all of the banknotes are different in size, a shape that is printed through intaglio printing, and color which is inaccessible to people who are blind or significantly visually impaired
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More From: Indonesian Journal of Electrical Engineering and Informatics (IJEEI)
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