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Open writer identification from offline handwritten signatures by jointing the one-class symbolic data analysis classifier and feature-dissimilarities

Usually, a large number of reference signatures are required for building the writing style model from offline handwritten signatures (OHSs). Moreover, the existing writer identification systems from OHSs are generally closed systems that require a retraining process when a new writer is added. This...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:International journal on document analysis and recognition 2023-03, Vol.26 (1), p.15-31
Main Authors: Djoudjai, Mohamed Anis, Chibani, Youcef
Format: Article
Language:English
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Summary:Usually, a large number of reference signatures are required for building the writing style model from offline handwritten signatures (OHSs). Moreover, the existing writer identification systems from OHSs are generally closed systems that require a retraining process when a new writer is added. This paper proposes an open writer identification system from OHSs, based on a new scheme of the one-class symbolic data analysis (OC-SDA) classifier, using few reference signatures. For generating more data, intra-class feature-dissimilarities, generated from curvelet transform, are introduced for building the symbolic representation model (SRM) associated with each writer. Feature-dissimilarities allow capturing more efficiently the intra-personnel variability produced naturally by a writer and, thus, increase the inter-personnel variability. Instead of using the mean and the standard deviation for building the OC-SDA model, intra-class feature-dissimilarities generated for each writer are modeled through a new weighted membership function, inspired from the real probability distribution of training intra-class feature-dissimilarities. The comparative analysis against the state-of-the-art works shows that the proposed OC-SDA classifier outperforms the existing classifiers on three public signature datasets GPDS-300, CEDAR-55 and MCYT-75, using only five reference signatures, achieving 98.31%, 98.06% and 99.89%, respectively, even when a combination of multiple classifiers is performed or even using learned features. Moreover, the evaluation of the proposed writer identification system in front of skilled forgeries shows its ability to detect also possible forged signatures in addition to the genuine ones.
ISSN:1433-2833
1433-2825
DOI:10.1007/s10032-022-00403-w