Artificial colorization of digitized microfilms: a preliminary study

A lot of available digitized manuscripts online are actually digitized microfilms, a technology dating back from the 1930s. With the progress of artificial colorization, we make the hypothesis that microfilms could be colored with these recent technologies, testing InstColorization. We train a model...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Thibault Clérice, Ariane Pinche
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Nicolas Turenne 2023-04-01
Series:Journal of Data Mining and Digital Humanities
Subjects:
Online Access:https://jdmdh.episciences.org/8454/pdf
Description
Summary:A lot of available digitized manuscripts online are actually digitized microfilms, a technology dating back from the 1930s. With the progress of artificial colorization, we make the hypothesis that microfilms could be colored with these recent technologies, testing InstColorization. We train a model over an ad-hoc dataset of 18 788 color images that are artificially gray-scaled for this purpose. With promising results in terms of colorization but clear limitations due to the difference between artificially grayscaled images and "naturaly" greyscaled microfilms, we evaluate the impact of this artificial colorization on two downstream tasks using Kraken: layout analysis and text recognition. Unfortunately, the results show little to no improvements which limits the interest of artificial colorization on manuscripts in the computer vision domain.
ISSN:2416-5999