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Reena Bajaj

Bio: Reena Bajaj is an academic researcher from Indian Institutes of Technology. The author has contributed to research in topics: Random subspace method & Numeral system. The author has an hindex of 2, co-authored 2 publications receiving 327 citations. Previous affiliations of Reena Bajaj include Indian Institute of Technology Delhi.

Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Experimental results show that combination of the classifiers increases reliability of the recognition results and is the unique feature of this work.

186 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Experimental results show that the technique for recognition of handwritten Devnagari numerals is effective and reliable and a multi-classifier connectionist architecture has been proposed for increasing reliability of the recognition results.
Abstract: This paper is concerned with recognition of handwritten Devnagari numerals. The basic objective of the present work is to provide an efficient and reliable technique for recognition of handwritten numerals. Three different types of features have been used for classification of numerals. A multi-classifier connectionist architecture has been proposed for increasing reliability of the recognition results. Experimental results show that the technique is effective and reliable.

157 citations


Cited by
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The nature of handwritten language, how it is transduced into electronic data, and the basic concepts behind written language recognition algorithms are described.
Abstract: Handwriting has continued to persist as a means of communication and recording information in day-to-day life even with the introduction of new technologies. Given its ubiquity in human transactions, machine recognition of handwriting has practical significance, as in reading handwritten notes in a PDA, in postal addresses on envelopes, in amounts in bank checks, in handwritten fields in forms, etc. This overview describes the nature of handwritten language, how it is transduced into electronic data, and the basic concepts behind written language recognition algorithms. Both the online case (which pertains to the availability of trajectory data during writing) and the off-line case (which pertains to scanned images) are considered. Algorithms for preprocessing, character and word recognition, and performance with practical systems are indicated. Other fields of application, like signature verification, writer authentification, handwriting learning tools are also considered.

2,653 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The various applications of neural networks in image processing are categorised into a novel two-dimensional taxonomy for image processing algorithms and their specific conditions are discussed in detail.

1,100 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
01 Sep 2008
TL;DR: This paper presents the state of the art in automatic signature verification and addresses the most valuable results obtained so far and highlights the most profitable directions of research to date.
Abstract: In recent years, along with the extraordinary diffusion of the Internet and a growing need for personal verification in many daily applications, automatic signature verification is being considered with renewed interest. This paper presents the state of the art in automatic signature verification. It addresses the most valuable results obtained so far and highlights the most profitable directions of research to date. It includes a comprehensive bibliography of more than 300 selected references as an aid for researchers working in the field.

688 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A review of the OCR work done on Indian language scripts and the scope of future work and further steps needed for Indian script OCR development is presented.

592 citations

Book ChapterDOI
TL;DR: It is shown experimentally that the machine expert based on local information outperforms the system based on global analysis when enough training data is available and it is found that global analysis is more appropriate in the case of small training set size.
Abstract: An on-line signature verification system exploiting both local and global information through decision-level fusion is presented. Global information is extracted with a feature-based representation and recognized by using Parzen Windows Classifiers. Local information is extracted as time functions of various dynamic properties and recognized by using Hidden Markov Models. Experimental results are given on the large MCYT signature database (330 signers, 16500 signatures) for random and skilled forgeries. Feature selection experiments based on feature ranking are carried out. It is shown experimentally that the machine expert based on local information outperforms the system based on global analysis when enough training data is available. Conversely, it is found that global analysis is more appropriate in the case of small training set size. The two proposed systems are also shown to give complementary recognition information which is successfully exploited using decision-level score fusion.

355 citations