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Talks and Poster Presentations (with Proceedings-Entry):

J. Hajič, M. Kolárová, A. Pacha, J. Calvo-Zaragoza:
"How Current Optical Music Recognition Systems Are Becoming Useful for Digital Libraries";
Talk: 5th International Conference on Digital Libraries for Musicology, Paris, France; 2018-09-28; in: "Proceedings of the 5th International Conference on Digital Libraries for Musicology", (2018), 57 - 61.



English abstract:
Optical Music Recognition (OMR) promises to make large collections of sheet music searchable by their musical content. It would open up novel ways of accessing the vast amount of written music that has never been recorded before. For a long time, OMR was not living up to that promise, as its performance was simply not good enough, especially on handwritten music or under non-ideal image conditions. However, OMR has recently seen a number of improvements, mainly due to the advances in machine learning. In this work, we take an OMR system based on the traditional pipeline and an end-to-end system, which represent the current state of the art, and illustrate in proof-of-concept experiments their applicability in retrieval settings. We also provide an example of a musicological study that can be replicated with OMR outputs at much lower costs. Taken together, this indicates that in some settings, current OMR can be used as a general tool for enriching digital libraries.


"Official" electronic version of the publication (accessed through its Digital Object Identifier - DOI)
http://dx.doi.org/10.1145/3273024.3273034

Electronic version of the publication:
https://publik.tuwien.ac.at/files/publik_271935.pdf


Created from the Publication Database of the Vienna University of Technology.