2007
DOI: 10.1142/s0218001407005302
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Automatic Allograph Matching in Forensic Writer Identification

Abstract: A well-established task in forensic writer identification focuses on the comparison of prototypical character shapes (allographs) present in handwriting. In order for a computer to perform this task convincingly, it should yield results that are plausible and understandable to the human expert. Trajectory matching is a well-known method to compare two allographs. This paper assesses a promising technique for so-called humancongruous trajectory matching, called Dynamic Time Warping (DTW). In the first part of t… Show more

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Cited by 39 publications
(42 citation statements)
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References 20 publications
(28 reference statements)
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“…They are also compared on the continuity criterion, which forces the matching between a point of the first curve and the nearest point of the second curve. If the relative temporal order of a point in curve 1 is about similar to the relative temporal order of a point of curve 2 (i.e., falls within a relative distance of plus or minus 0.13 -a value between 0 and 1 that was based on previous studies [14]), then these two points fulfill the continuity criterion (see Figure 1; for clarification and an exact definition of these criteria, see [14]). For each point of curve 1 all points of curve 2 that satisfy these requirements are evaluated and the point of curve 2 with the minimum distance to the point of curve 1 is chosen to form a pair of matching points.…”
Section: Dynamic Time Warping Distance Analysismentioning
confidence: 93%
See 3 more Smart Citations
“…They are also compared on the continuity criterion, which forces the matching between a point of the first curve and the nearest point of the second curve. If the relative temporal order of a point in curve 1 is about similar to the relative temporal order of a point of curve 2 (i.e., falls within a relative distance of plus or minus 0.13 -a value between 0 and 1 that was based on previous studies [14]), then these two points fulfill the continuity criterion (see Figure 1; for clarification and an exact definition of these criteria, see [14]). For each point of curve 1 all points of curve 2 that satisfy these requirements are evaluated and the point of curve 2 with the minimum distance to the point of curve 1 is chosen to form a pair of matching points.…”
Section: Dynamic Time Warping Distance Analysismentioning
confidence: 93%
“…DTW distances are in arbitrary units because all letters were first rescaled in size (between -.5 and +.5) to derive the individual prototype (IP), the child's "personal average", for each condition. In this study the prototype was calculated by the Merge-samples algorithm (for details see [14]), a procedure that creates a DTW distance from the IP for every single letter. Two extreme examples of the distribution of these DTW distances are presented in Figure 2.…”
Section: Dynamic Time Warping Distance Analysismentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Such state-of-the-art algorithms and techniques make use of a template matching approach that assigns handwriting styles to prototype templates which are representative of the handwriting styles [9,[17][18][19][20]. The prototypes attempt to model the writing styles of the writers as close as possible, based on features extracted from the online handwritten documents.…”
Section: Previous Workmentioning
confidence: 99%