Sediqa: Sound emitting document image quality assessment in a reading aid for the visually impaired

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

For visually impaired people (VIPs), the ability to convert text to sound can mean a new level of independence or the simple joy of a good book. With significant advances in optical character recognition (OCR) in recent years, a number of reading aids are appearing on the market. These reading aids convert images captured by a camera to text which can then be read aloud. However, all of these reading aids suffer from a key issue—the user must be able to visually target the text and capture an image of sufficient quality for the OCR algorithm to function—no small task for VIPs. In this work, a sound-emitting document image quality assessment metric (SEDIQA) is proposed which allows the user to hear the quality of the text image and automatically captures the best image for OCR accuracy. This work also includes testing of OCR performance against image degradations, to identify the most significant contributors to accuracy reduction. The proposed no-reference image quality assessor (NR-IQA) is validated alongside established NR-IQAs and this work includes insights into the performance of these NR-IQAs on document images. SEDIQA is found to consistently select the best image for OCR accuracy. The full system includes a document image enhancement technique which introduces improvements in OCR accuracy with an average increase of 22% and a maximum increase of 68%.

Original languageEnglish
Article number168
JournalJournal of Imaging
Volume7
Issue number9
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Sep 2021

Keywords

  • D-IQA
  • Document images
  • Image quality assessment
  • Image quality metrics
  • NR-IQAs
  • OCR accuracy
  • OCR improvements
  • OCR prediction
  • Reading aids
  • Text-based images
  • Visual aids
  • Visually impaired

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