Automatic Chinese seal identification

A combination of image processing and matching techniques is proposed to solve the problem of seal identification. The techniques include thresholding, rotation, thinning, reexpansion, and finally matching of seal images. The principle for identification is based on the fact that the spatial distributions of the stroke skeletons of the characters engraved by human hands on two distinct seals will never be totally identical in appearance. An appropriate similarity measure for matching stroke skeletons of characters is proposed. A high identification rate of sample seal imprints reveals that the proposed approach is effective.

[1]  King-Sun Fu,et al.  An automatic visual inspection system for integrated circuit chips , 1980 .

[2]  C. V. Kameswara Rao,et al.  Type Classification of Fingerprints: A Syntactic Approach , 1980, IEEE Transactions on Pattern Analysis and Machine Intelligence.

[3]  William Stallings,et al.  Approaches to chinese character recognition , 1976, Pattern Recognit..

[4]  King-Sun Fu,et al.  A syntactic approach to fingerprint pattern recognition , 1975, Pattern Recognit..

[5]  Azriel Rosenfeld,et al.  Thresholding Using Relaxation , 1981, IEEE Transactions on Pattern Analysis and Machine Intelligence.

[6]  King-Sun Fu,et al.  A Tree System Approach for Fingerprint Pattern Recognition , 1976, IEEE Transactions on Pattern Analysis and Machine Intelligence.

[7]  Shmuel Peleg,et al.  A New Probabilistic Relaxation Scheme , 1980, IEEE Transactions on Pattern Analysis and Machine Intelligence.

[8]  John F. Heafner,et al.  On-Line Computer Classification of Handprinted Chinese Characters as a Translation Aid , 1967, IEEE Trans. Electron. Comput..

[9]  Paul G. Hoel,et al.  Introduction to Probability Theory , 1972 .

[10]  Azriel Rosenfeld,et al.  Digital Picture Processing , 1976 .