Mathematical Models for Automatic Line Detection
Journal of the ACM (JACM)
COMPUTER RECOGNITION OF PRISMATIC SOLIDS
COMPUTER RECOGNITION OF PRISMATIC SOLIDS
Edge Detection in Simple Scenes Using a Priori Information
IEEE Transactions on Computers
Local Properties of Binary Images in Two Dimensions
IEEE Transactions on Computers
Decomposition of a visual scene into three-dimensional bodies
AFIPS '68 (Fall, part I) Proceedings of the December 9-11, 1968, fall joint computer conference, part I
Experiments in the recognition of hand-printed text, part I: character recognition
AFIPS '68 (Fall, part II) Proceedings of the December 9-11, 1968, fall joint computer conference, part II
The design of an OCR system for reading hand written numerals
AFIPS '68 (Fall, part II) Proceedings of the December 9-11, 1968, fall joint computer conference, part II
The AIDUS system: automated capture, update and republication of maintenance manuals
AFIPS '76 Proceedings of the June 7-10, 1976, national computer conference and exposition
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The GRAFIX I system was developed in the late 1960's as a fast flexible system for processing and analyzing filmed images, particularly of material which is essentially binary (black and white), such as printed text, line drawings, certain biomedical images, fingerprints, etc. It incorporates a large scale general purpose time shared computer to provide the facilities for the efficient development of algorithms necessary to perform various image processing and analysis tasks. In addition it contains a fast, high resolution flying-spot film scanner and a powerful and rather general slave processor (the binary image processor, or BIP) which provide data collection and manipulation facilities adequate to perform image processing and analysis tasks at commercially practical speeds. So far it has been successfully employed in a commercial environment to the reading of printed multifont text in complex page formats, and to the reading of Cyrillic, Greek and even handprinted text. At present we are considering future applications beyond the area of optical character recognition, particularly the analysis of engineering drawings, as well as the automatic analysis and classification of fingerprints, the analysis of biomedical images such as chromosomes, the analysis of x-ray images, and the analysis of satellite imagery data, among others.