A survey of image registration techniques
ACM Computing Surveys (CSUR)
Restoring 2D Content from Distorted Documents
IEEE Transactions on Pattern Analysis and Machine Intelligence
Style-consistency calligraphy synthesis system in digital library
Proceedings of the 9th ACM/IEEE-CS joint conference on Digital libraries
Real-Time Camera-Based Recognition of Characters and Pictograms
ICDAR '09 Proceedings of the 2009 10th International Conference on Document Analysis and Recognition
Robust Extraction of Text from Camera Images
ICDAR '09 Proceedings of the 2009 10th International Conference on Document Analysis and Recognition
Ground truth creation for handwriting recognition in historical documents
DAS '10 Proceedings of the 9th IAPR International Workshop on Document Analysis Systems
HistDoc - a toolbox for processing images of historical documents
ICIAR'10 Proceedings of the 7th international conference on Image Analysis and Recognition - Volume Part II
Image change detection algorithms: a systematic survey
IEEE Transactions on Image Processing
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The digitization of primary sources has long emphasized facsimile as the primary goal. We show examples illustrating the shift from facsimile-focused to digitization as data collection, enabling a much broader set of goals: analysis, restoration, narrative construction, and visualization. While facsimile remains an important by-product, digitization as data collection enables new possibilities in digital restoration, context-preserving language translation, detection of change over time, and the construction of high-level narratives that provide a compelling interpretive framework. Each of these examples is made possible by acquiring more data than what may be necessary for facsimile alone, part of a necessary change in the mindset of conservators, curators, and digitization teams.