학술논문

A Prototype Gutenberg-HathiTrust Sentence-level Parallel Corpus for OCR Error Analysis: Pilot Investigations
Document Type
Conference
Source
2022 ACM/IEEE Joint Conference on Digital Libraries (JCDL) Digital Libraries (JCDL), 2022 ACM/IEEE Joint Conference on. :1-5 Jun, 2022
Subject
Computing and Processing
Publishing
Optical character recognition
Natural languages
Buildings
Prototypes
Metadata
Libraries
sentence-level parallel corpus
optical character recognition
error analysis
digital libraries
digital humanities
data curation
Language
Abstract
This exploratory study proposes a prototype sentence-level parallel corpus to support studying optical character recognition (OCR) quality in curated digitized library collections. Existing data resources, such as ICDAR2019 [21] and GT4HistOCR [23], generally aligned content by artifact publishing characteristics such as documents or lines, which is limited to explore OCR noise concentrating on natural language granularity like sentences and chapters. Building upon an existing volume-aligned corpus that collected human-proofread texts from Project Gutenberg and paired OCR views from HathiTrust Digital Library, we extracted and aligned 167,079 sentences from 189 sampled books in four domains published from 1793 to 1984. To support downstream research on OCR quality, we conducted an analysis of OCR errors with a specific focus on their associations with the source text metadata. We found that sampled data in agriculture has a higher ratio of real-word errors than other domains, while sentences from social-science volumes contain more non-word errors. Besides, data sampled from early-age volumes tend to have a high ratio of non-word errors, while samples from recently-published volumes is likely to have more real-word errors. Following our findings, we suggest that scholars should consider the potential influence of source data characteristics on their findings in the study of OCR quality issues.CCS CONCEPTS• Information systems → Digital libraries and archives; • Applied computing → Document management and text processing; Document capture.