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Institut für Computerlinguistik

Article in the Journal for Language Technology and Computational Linguistics (JLCL)


Simon Clematide, Lenz Furrer and Martin Volk published an article in the Journal for Language Technology and Computational Linguistics (JLCL): “Crowdsourcing the OCR Ground Truth of a German and French Cultural Heritage Corpus.”

Abstract:
Crowdsourcing approaches for post-correction of OCR output (Optical Character Recognition) have been successfully applied to several historical text collections. We report on our crowd-correction platform Kokos, which we built to improve the OCR quality of the digitized yearbooks of the Swiss Alpine Club (SAC) from the 19th century. This multilingual heritage corpus consists of Alpine texts mainly written in German and French, all typeset in Antiqua font. Finding and engaging volunteers for correcting large amounts of pages into high quality text requires a carefully designed user interface, an easy-to-use workflow, and continuous efforts for keeping the participants motivated.
More than 180,000 characters on about 21,000 pages were corrected by volunteers in about 7 months, achieving an OCR ground truth with a systematically evaluated accuracy of 99.7% on the word level. The crowdsourced OCR ground truth and the corresponding original OCR recognition results from Abbyy FineReader for each page are available as a resource for machine learning and evaluation. Additionally, the scanned images (300 dpi) of all pages are included to enable tests with other OCR software.

Full text:

https://jlcl.org/content/2-allissues/1-heft1-2018/jlcl_2018-1_2.pdf