• Title/Summary/Keyword: Optical character recognition

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The Study of Digitalization of Analog Gauge using Image Processing (이미지 처리를 이용한 아날로그 게이지 디지털화에 관한 연구)

  • Seon-Deok Kim;Cherl-O Bae;Kyung-Min Park;Jae-Hoon Jee
    • Journal of the Korean Society of Marine Environment & Safety
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    • v.29 no.4
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    • pp.389-394
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    • 2023
  • In recent years, use of machine automation is rising in the industry. Ships also obtain machine condition information from sensor as digital information. However, on ships, crew members regularly surveil the engine room to check the condition of equipment and their information through analog gauges. This is a time-consuming and tedious process and poses safety risks to the crew while on surveillance. To address this, engine room surveillance using an autonomous mobile robot is being actively explored as a solution because it can reduce time, costs, and the safety risks for crew. Analog gauge reading using an autonomous mobile robot requires digitization for the robot to recognize the gauge value. In this study, image processing techniques were applied to achieve this. Analog gauge images were subjected to image preprocessing to remove noise and highlight their features. The center point, indicator point, minimum value and maximum value of the analog gauge were detected through image processing. Through the straight line connecting these points, the angle from the minimum value to the maximum value and the angle from the minimum value to indicator point were obtained. The obtained angle is digitized as the value currently indicated by the analog gauge through a formula. It was confirmed from the experiments that the digitization of the analog gauge using image processing was successful, indicating the equivalent current value shown by the gauge. When applied to surveillance robots, this algorithm can minimize safety risks and time and opportunity costs of crew members for engine room surveillance.

Organizing an in-class hackathon to correct PDF-to-text conversion errors of Genomics & Informatics 1.0

  • Kim, Sunho;Kim, Royoung;Nam, Hee-Jo;Kim, Ryeo-Gyeong;Ko, Enjin;Kim, Han-Su;Shin, Jihye;Cho, Daeun;Jin, Yurhee;Bae, Soyeon;Jo, Ye Won;Jeong, San Ah;Kim, Yena;Ahn, Seoyeon;Jang, Bomi;Seong, Jiheyon;Lee, Yujin;Seo, Si Eun;Kim, Yujin;Kim, Ha-Jeong;Kim, Hyeji;Sung, Hye-Lynn;Lho, Hyoyoung;Koo, Jaywon;Chu, Jion;Lim, Juwon;Kim, Youngju;Lee, Kyungyeon;Lim, Yuri;Kim, Meongeun;Hwang, Seonjeong;Han, Shinhye;Bae, Sohyeun;Kim, Sua;Yoo, Suhyeon;Seo, Yeonjeong;Shin, Yerim;Kim, Yonsoo;Ko, You-Jung;Baek, Jihee;Hyun, Hyejin;Choi, Hyemin;Oh, Ji-Hye;Kim, Da-Young;Park, Hyun-Seok
    • Genomics & Informatics
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    • v.18 no.3
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    • pp.33.1-33.7
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    • 2020
  • This paper describes a community effort to improve earlier versions of the full-text corpus of Genomics & Informatics by semi-automatically detecting and correcting PDF-to-text conversion errors and optical character recognition errors during the first hackathon of Genomics & Informatics Annotation Hackathon (GIAH) event. Extracting text from multi-column biomedical documents such as Genomics & Informatics is known to be notoriously difficult. The hackathon was piloted as part of a coding competition of the ELTEC College of Engineering at Ewha Womans University in order to enable researchers and students to create or annotate their own versions of the Genomics & Informatics corpus, to gain and create knowledge about corpus linguistics, and simultaneously to acquire tangible and transferable skills. The proposed projects during the hackathon harness an internal database containing different versions of the corpus and annotations.