METS/ALTO OCR enhancing tool by the National Library of Luxembourg (BnL)

Overview

Nautilus-OCR

The National Library of Luxembourg (BnL) started its first initiative in digitizing newspapers, with layout recognition and OCR on article level, back in 2006. Service providers were asked to create images of excellent quality, to run an optical layout recognition process, to identify articles and to run OCR on them. The data was modeled according to the METS/ALTO standard. In the meantime however, the potential of OCR software increased.

Developed by BnL in the context of its Open Data initiative, Nautilus-OCR uses these improvements in technology and the already structured data to rerun and enhance OCR. Nautilus-OCR can be used in two ways:

  1. Main purpose: Enhance the OCR quality of original (ori) METS/ALTO packages.

    drawing
    Nautilus-OCR METS/ALTO to METS/ALTO pipeline:
    - Extracts all ori images/text pairs
    - Targets a specific set of block types
    - Uses enhancement prediction on every target to possibly run OCR
    - Integrates new outputs into an updated METS/ALTO package

  2. Alternatively: Use as a regular OCR engine that is applied on a set of images.

    drawing
    Nautilus-OCR provides the possibility to visually compare ori (left) to new (right) outputs.

Key features:
  • Custom model training.
  • Included pre-trained OCR, font recognition and enhancement prediction models.
  • METS/ALTO to METS/ALTO using enhancement prediction.
  • Fast, multi-font OCR pipeline.

Nautilus-OCR is mainly built on open-source libraries combined with some proprietary contributions. Please note that the project is trying to be a generalized version of a tailored implementation for the specific needs of BnL.

Table of Contents

Quick Start

After having followed the installation instructions, Nautilus-OCR can be run by using the included BnL models and example METS/ALTO data.

With nautilusocr/ as the current working directory, first copy the BnL models to the final/ folder.1

cp models/bnl/* models/final/

Next, run enhance on the examples/ directory, containg a single mets-alto-package/

python3 src/main.py enhance -d examples/ -r 0.02

to generate new ALTO files for every block with a minimum enhancement prediction of 2%. Finally, the newly generated files can be located in output/.

1 As explained in models/final/README.md, the models within models/final/ are automatically applied when executing the enhance, train-epr, ocr and test-ocr actions. Models outside of models/final/ are supposed to be stored for testing and comparison purposes.

Requirements

Nautilus-OCR requires:

  • Linux / macOS
    The software requires dependencies that only work on Linux and macOS. Windows is not supported at the moment.
  • Python 3.8+
    The software has been developed using Python 3.8.5.
  • Dependencies
    Access to the libraries listed in requirements.txt.
  • METS/ALTO
    METS/ALTO packages as data, or alternatively TextBlock images representing single-column snippets of text.

Installation

With Python3 (tested on version 3.8.5) installed, clone this repostitory and install the required dependencies:

git clone https://github.com/natliblux/nautilusocr
cd nautilusocr
pip3 install -r requirements.txt

Hunspell dependency might require:

apt-get install libhunspell-dev
brew install hunspell

OpenCV dependency might require:

apt install libgl1-mesa-glx
apt install libcudart10.1

You can test that all dependencies have been sucessfully installed by running

python3 src/main.py -h

and looking for the following output:

Starting Nautilus-OCR

usage: main.py [-h] {set-ocr,train-ocr,test-ocr,enhance,ocr,set-fcr,train-fcr,test-fcr,test-seg,train-epr,test-epr} ...

Nautilus-OCR Command Line Tool

positional arguments:
  {set-ocr,train-ocr,test-ocr,enhance,ocr,set-fcr,train-fcr,test-fcr,test-seg,train-epr,test-epr}
                        sub-command help

optional arguments:
  -h, --help            show this help message and exit

Workflow

The command-line tool consists of four different modules, with each one exposing a predefined set of actions:

  • ocr - optical character recognition
  • seg - text line segmentation
  • fcr - font class recognition
  • epr - enhancement prediction

To get started, one should take note of the options available in config.ini and most importantly set the device (CPU/GPU) parameter and decide on the set of font_classes and supported_languages. Next, a general workflow could looks as follows:

  1. Test the seg algorithm using test-seg to see whether any parameters need to be adjusted.
  2. Create a fcr train set using set-fcr based on font ground truth information.
  3. Train a fcr model using train-fcr.
  4. Test the fcr model accurcy using test-fcr.
  5. Create an ocr train set using set-ocr based on ocr ground truth information.
  6. Train an ocr model for every font class using train-ocr.
  7. Test the ocr model for every font class using test-ocr.
  8. Train an epr model based on ground truth and ori data using train-epr.
  9. Test the epr model accuracy using test-epr.
  10. Enhance METS/ALTO packages using enhance.
  11. Alternatively: Run ocr on a set of images using ocr.

This id done by calling main.py followed by the desired action and options:

python3 src/main.py [action] [options]

The following module sections will list all available actions and options.

Modules

optical character recognition

set-ocr

Creates an ocr train set consisting of image/text line pairs. Every pair is of type New, Artificial or Existing:

  • New: Extracted using an image and ALTO file.
  • Generated: Image part of pair is generated artificially based on given input text.
  • Existing: Pair exists already (has been prepared beforehand) and is included in the train set.
Option Default Explanation
-j --jsonl Path to jsonl file referencing image and ALTO files 1 2
-c --confidence 9 (max tolerant) Highest tolerated confidence value for every character in line
-m --model fcr-model Name of fcr model to be used in absence of font class indication 3
-e --existing Path to directory containing existing pairs 4 5
-g --generated 0 (none) Number of artificially generated pairs to be added per font class 6 7
-t --text Path to text file containing text for artificial pairs 8
-n --nlines -1 (max) Maximum number of pairs per font class
-s --set ocr-train-set Name of ocr train set

1 Example lines:

{"image": "/path/image1.png", "gt": "/path/alto1.xml"}
{"image": "/path/image2.png", "gt": "/path/alto2.xml", "gt-block-id": "TB1"}
{"image": "/path/image3.png", "gt": "/path/alto3.xml", "gt-block-id": "TB2", "font": "fraktur"}

2 Key gt-block-id can optionally reference a single block in a multi-block ALTO file.
3 Absence of font key means that -m option must be set to automatically determine the font class.
4 Naming convention for existing pairs: [pair-name].png/.tif & [pair-name].gt.txt.
5 Image part of existing pairs is supposed to be unbinarized.
6 Artificially generated lines represent lower quality examples for the model to learn from.
7 Fonts in fonts/artificial/ are being randomly used and can be adjusted per font class.
8 Text is given by a .txt file with individual words delimited by spaces and line breaks.

train-ocr

Trains an ocr model for a specific font using an ocr train set.

Option Default Explanation
-s --set Name of ocr train set to be used
-f --font Name of font that ocr model should be trained on
-m --model ocr-model Name of ocr model to be created

test-ocr

Tests models in models/final/ on a test set defined by a jsonl file.
A comparison to the original ocr data can optionally be drawn.

Option Default Explanation
-j --jsonl Path to jsonl file referencing image and ground truth ALTO files 1 2
-i --image False Generate output image comparing ocr output with source image
-c --confidence False Add ocr confidence (through font greyscale level) to output image

1 Example lines:

{"id": "001", "image": "/path/image1.png", "gt": "/path/alto1.xml"}
{"id": "002", "image": "/path/image2.png", "gt": "/path/alto2.xml", "gt-block-id": "TB1"}
{"id": "003", "image": "/path/image3.png", "gt": "/path/alto3.xml", "gt-block-id": "TB2", "ori": "/path2/alto3.xml"}
{"id": "004", "image": "/path/image4.png", "gt": "/path/alto4.xml", "gt-block-id": "TB3", "ori": "/path2/alto4.xml", "ori-block-id": "TB4"}

2 Keys ori and ori-block-id can optionally reference original ocr output for comparison purposes.

enhance

Applies ocr on a set of original METS/ALTO packages, while aiming to enhance ocr accuracy.1
An optional enhancement prediction model can prevent running ocr for some target blocks.
Models in models/final/ are automatically used for this action.2

Option Default Explanation
-d --directory Path to directory containing all orignal METS/ALTO packages 3 4
-r --required 0.0 Value for minimum required enhancement prediction 5

1 Target text block types can be adjusted in config.ini.
2 The presence of an epr model is optional.
3 METS files need to end in -mets.xml.
4 Every package name should be unique and is defined as the directory name of the METS file.
5 Enhancement predictions are in range [-1,1], set to -1 to disable epr and automatically reprocess all target blocks.

ocr

Applies ocr on a directory of images while using the models in models/final/.

Option Default Explanation
-d --directory Path to directory containing target ocr source images 1
-a --alto False Output ocr in ALTO format
-i --image False Generate output image comparing ocr with source image
-c --confidence False Add ocr confidence (through font greyscale level) to output image

1 Subdirectories possible, images should be in .png or .tif format.

text line segmentation

test-seg

Tests the CombiSeg segmentation algorithm on a test set defined by a jsonl file. The correct functionning of the segmentation algorithm is essential for most other modules and actions.
The default parameters should generally work well, however they can be adjusted. 1

Option Default Explanation
-j --jsonl path to jsonl file referencing image and ALTO files 2

1 Algorithm parameters can be adjusted in config.ini in case of unsatisfactory performance.
2 Example lines:

{"image": "/path/image1.png", "gt": "/path/alto1.xml"}
{"image": "/path/image2.png", "gt": "/path/alto2.xml", "gt-block-id": "TB1"}

font class recognition

set-fcr

Creates a fcr train set consisting of individual character images.

Option Default Explanation
-j --jsonl Path to jsonl file referencing image files and the respective font classes 1
-n --nchars max Maximum number of characters extracted from every image 2
-s --set fcr-train-set Name of fcr train set

1 Example line:

{"image": "/path/image.png", "font": "fraktur"}

2 Fewer extracted chars for a larger amount of images generally leads to a more diverse train set.

train-fcr

Trains a fcr model using a fcr train set.

Option Default Explanation
-s --set Name of fcr train set
-m --model fcr-model Name of fcr model to be created

test-fcr

Tests a fcr model on a test set defined by a jsonl file.

Option Default Explanation
-j --jsonl Path to jsonl file referencing image files and the respective font classes 1
-m --model fcr-model Name of fcr model to be tested

1 Example line:

{"image": "/path/image.png", "font": "fraktur"}

enhancement prediction

This module requires language dictionaries. For all language xx in supported_languages in config.ini, please either add a list of words as xx.txt or the Hunspell files xx.dic and xx.aff to dicts/.

train-epr

Trains an epr model (for use in enhance) that predicts the enhancement in ocr accuracy (from ori to new) and can hence be used to prevent ocr from running on all target blocks.
Please take note of the parameters in config.ini before starting training.
This action uses the models in models/final/.

Option Default Explanation
-j --jsonl Path to jsonl file referencing image, ground truth ALTO and original ALTO files 1
-m --model epr-model Name of epr model to be created

1 Example lines:

{"image": "/path/image1.png", "gt": "/path/alto1.xml", "ori": "/path/alto1.xml", "year": 1859}
{"image": "/path/image2.png", "gt": "/path/alto2.xml", "gt-block-id": "TB1", "ori": "/path/alto2.xml", "year": 1859}
{"image": "/path/image3.png", "gt": "/path/alto3.xml", "gt-block-id": "TB2", "ori": "/path/alto3.xml", "ori-block-id": "TB2", "year": 1859}

test-epr

Tests an epr model and returns the mean average error after applying leave-one-out cross-validation (kNN algorithm).

Option Default Explanation
-m --model epr-model Name of epr model to be tested

Models

Nautilus-OCR encloses four pre-trained models:

  • bnl-ocr-antiqua.mlmodel

OCR model built with kraken and trained on the antiqua data (70k pairs) of an extended version of bnl-ground-truth-newspapers-before-1878 that is not limited to the cut-off date of 1878.

  • bnl-ocr-fraktur.mlmodel

OCR model built with kraken and trained on the fraktur data (43k pairs) of an extended version of bnl-ground-truth-newspapers-before-1878 that is not limited to the cut-off date of 1878.

  • bnl-fcr.h5

Binary font recognition model built with TensorFlow and trained to perform classification using font classes [antiqua, fraktur]. Please note that the fcr module automatically extends the set of classes to [antiqua, fraktur, unknown], to cover for the case where the neural network input preprocessing fails. The model has been trained on 50k individual character images and showed 100% accuracy on a 200 image test set.

  • bnl-epr-de-fr-lb.jsonl

Enhancement prediction model trained on more than 4.5k text blocks for the language set [de, fr, lb]. Training data has been published between 1840 and 1960. Enhancement is predicted for the application of bnl-ocr-antiqua.mlmodel and bnl-ocr-fraktur.mlmodel, therefore based on font class set [antiqua, fraktur]. The model makes use of the dictionaries for all three languages within dicts/. Using leave-one-out cross-validation (kNN algorithm), mean average error of 0.024 was achieved.

Ground Truth

bnl-ground-truth-newspapers-before-1878

OCR ground truth dataset including more than 33k text line image/text pairs, split in antiqua (19k) and fraktur (14k) font classes. The set is based on Luxembourg historical newspapers in the public domain (published before 1878), written generally in German, French and Luxembourgish. Transcription was done using a double-keying technique with a minimum accuracy of 99.95%. Font class was automatically determined using bnl-fcr.h5.

Libraries

Nautilus-OCR is mostly built on open-source libraries, with the most important ones being:

License

License: GPL v3

See COPYING to see full text.

Credits

Thanks and credits go to the Lexicolux project, whose work is the basis for the generation of dicts/lb.txt.

Contact

If you want to get in touch, please contact us here.

Owner
National Library of Luxembourg
National Library of Luxembourg
Official repository of Semantic Image Matting

Semantic Image Matting This is the official repository of Semantic Image Matting (CVPR2021). Overview Natural image matting separates the foreground f

192 Dec 29, 2022
Robbing the FED: Directly Obtaining Private Data in Federated Learning with Modified Models

Robbing the FED: Directly Obtaining Private Data in Federated Learning with Modified Models This repo contains a barebones implementation for the atta

16 Dec 04, 2022
Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition, NUS CS4243, 2022

CS4243_2022 Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition, NUS CS4243, 2022 Cloud Machine #1 : Google Colab (Free GPU) Follow this Notebook installation : h

Xavier Bresson 142 Dec 15, 2022
📚 A collection of Jupyter notebooks for learning and experimenting with OpenVINO 👓

A collection of ready-to-run Python* notebooks for learning and experimenting with OpenVINO developer tools. The notebooks are meant to provide an introduction to OpenVINO basics and teach developers

OpenVINO Toolkit 840 Jan 03, 2023
Data-driven reduced order modeling for nonlinear dynamical systems

SSMLearn Data-driven Reduced Order Models for Nonlinear Dynamical Systems This package perform data-driven identification of reduced order model based

Haller Group, Nonlinear Dynamics 27 Dec 13, 2022
Official code for the CVPR 2022 (oral) paper "Extracting Triangular 3D Models, Materials, and Lighting From Images".

nvdiffrec Joint optimization of topology, materials and lighting from multi-view image observations as described in the paper Extracting Triangular 3D

NVIDIA Research Projects 1.4k Jan 01, 2023
we propose a novel deep network, named feature aggregation and refinement network (FARNet), for the automatic detection of anatomical landmarks.

Feature Aggregation and Refinement Network for 2D Anatomical Landmark Detection Overview Localization of anatomical landmarks is essential for clinica

aoyueyuan 0 Aug 28, 2022
The project is an official implementation of our paper "3D Human Pose Estimation with Spatial and Temporal Transformers".

3D Human Pose Estimation with Spatial and Temporal Transformers This repo is the official implementation for 3D Human Pose Estimation with Spatial and

Ce Zheng 363 Dec 28, 2022
A hand tracking demo made with mediapipe where you can control lights with pinching your fingers and moving your hand up/down.

HandTrackingBrightnessControl A hand tracking demo made with mediapipe where you can control lights with pinching your fingers and moving your hand up

Teemu Laurila 19 Feb 12, 2022
Automatic Attendance marker for LMS Practice School Division, BITS Pilani

LMS Attendance Marker Automatic script for lazy people to mark attendance on LMS for Practice School 1. Setup Add your LMS credentials and time slot t

Nihar Bansal 3 Jun 12, 2021
Real time sign language recognition

The proposed work aims at converting american sign language gestures into English that can be understood by everyone in real time.

Mohit Kaushik 6 Jun 13, 2022
Dilated Convolution for Semantic Image Segmentation

Multi-Scale Context Aggregation by Dilated Convolutions Introduction Properties of dilated convolution are discussed in our ICLR 2016 conference paper

Fisher Yu 764 Dec 26, 2022
Learning Calibrated-Guidance for Object Detection in Aerial Images

Learning Calibrated-Guidance for Object Detection in Aerial Images arxiv We propose a simple yet effective Calibrated-Guidance (CG) scheme to enhance

51 Sep 22, 2022
eXPeditious Data Transfer

xpdt: eXPeditious Data Transfer About xpdt is (yet another) language for defining data-types and generating code for serializing and deserializing the

Gianni Tedesco 3 Jan 06, 2022
Parris, the automated infrastructure setup tool for machine learning algorithms.

README Parris, the automated infrastructure setup tool for machine learning algorithms. What Is This Tool? Parris is a tool for automating the trainin

Joseph Greene 319 Aug 02, 2022
Emotion Recognition from Facial Images

Reconhecimento de Emoções a partir de imagens faciais Este projeto implementa um classificador simples que utiliza técncias de deep learning e transfe

Gabriel 2 Feb 09, 2022
RID-Noise: Towards Robust Inverse Design under Noisy Environments

This is code of RID-Noise. Reproduce RID-Noise Results Toy tasks Please refer to the notebook ridnoise.ipynb to view experiments on three toy tasks. B

Thyrix 2 Nov 23, 2022
Transfer SemanticKITTI labeles into other dataset/sensor formats.

LiDAR-Transfer Transfer SemanticKITTI labeles into other dataset/sensor formats. Content Convert datasets (NUSCENES, FORD, NCLT) to KITTI format Minim

Photogrammetry & Robotics Bonn 64 Nov 21, 2022
Pytorch ImageNet1k Loader with Bounding Boxes.

ImageNet 1K Bounding Boxes For some experiments, you might wanna pass only the background of imagenet images vs passing only the foreground. Here, I'v

Amin Ghiasi 11 Oct 15, 2022