Hyperspectral Imaging for Ink Mismatch Detection

Ink mismatch detection provides important clues to forensic document examiners by identifying whether a particular handwritten note was written with a specific pen, or to show that some part (e.g. signature) of a note is written with a different ink as compared to the rest of the note. In this paper, we show that a hyper spectral image (HSI) of handwritten notes can discriminate between inks that are visually similar in appearance. For this purpose, we develop the first ever hyper spectral image database of handwritten notes in various blue and black inks, comprising a total of 70 hyper spectral images each in 33 bands of the visible spectrum. In an unsupervised clustering scheme, the spectral responses of inks fall into separate clusters to allow segmentation of two different inks in a questioned document. The same method fails to segment inks correctly when applied to RGB scans of these documents, since the inks are very hard to distinguish in the visible spectral range. HSI overcomes the shortcomings of RGB and allows better discrimination between inks. We further evaluate which subset of bands from HSI is most useful for the purpose of ink mismatch detection. We hope that these findings will stimulate the use of HSI in document analysis research, especially for questioned document examination.

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