Curve Reconstruction and Approximation in Binarised Scanned Historic Watermark Images

A Study of Techniques Aiding Binarisation for an Automated Watermark Similarity-matching Pipeline

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Abstract

A curve is a continuously bending line with no angles that can be found anywhere in the real world, forming shapes and outlines. They are also the building blocks of historic watermarks, imprinted images on paper that may be used to identify its manufacturers. Their shapes consist of curves as bent wires are used in their production process. Often, the processing of scans of those curves may introduce gaps or a degraded quality which could be corrected by reconstructing the curves in those gaps. Curve reconstruction is a fundamental problem with many research applications, one of which is the reconstruction of curves for binarised scans of historic watermarks. In this paper, a data generation approach is proposed for the simulation of the watermark curves domain through singular automatically generated curves and human-drawn sketches which are then used along binarised watermark scans. I propose a hybrid method combining machine-learning and analytical approaches for curve reconstruction, aiming to leverage their advantages together. The method is compared to its components separately. Quantitative results against them demonstrate the superiority of the pure machine learning approach, as well as the need for more research into potentially better analytical components and a more realistic domain simulation.

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