Abstract

Deep convolutional neural networks have made great progress in recent handwritten character recognition (HCR) by learning discriminative features from large amounts of labeled data. However, the large variance of handwriting styles across writers is still a big challenge to the robust HCR. To alleviate this issue, an intuitional idea is to extract writer-independent semantic features from handwritten characters, while standard printed characters are writer-independent stencils for handwritten characters. They could be used as prior knowledge to guide models to exploit writer-independent semantic features for HCR. In this paper, we propose a novel adversarial feature learning (AFL) model to incorporate the prior knowledge of printed data and writer-independent semantic features to improve the performance of HCR on limited training data. Different from available handcrafted features methods, the proposed AFL model exploits writer-independent semantic features automatically, and standard printed data as prior knowledge is learnt objectively. Systematic experiments on MNIST and CASIA–HWDB show that the proposed model is competitive with the state-of-the-art methods on the offline HCR task.

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