Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
531193 Pattern Recognition 2006 13 Pages PDF
Abstract

Many pattern recognition algorithms are based on the nearest-neighbour search and use the well-known edit distance, for which the primitive edit costs are usually fixed in advance. In this article, we aim at learning an unbiased stochastic edit distance in the form of a finite-state transducer from a corpus of (input, output) pairs of strings. Contrary to the other standard methods, which generally use the Expectation Maximisation algorithm, our algorithm learns a transducer independently on the marginal probability distribution of the input strings. Such an unbiased way to proceed requires to optimise the parameters of a conditional transducer instead of a joint one. We apply our new model in the context of handwritten digit recognition. We show, carrying out a large series of experiments, that it always outperforms the standard edit distance.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Computer Science Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition
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