Handwritten Music Object Detection: Open Issues and Baseline Results
By Alexander Pacha, Kwon-Young Choi, Bertrand Coüasnon, Yann Ricquebourg, and Horst Eidenberger
Abstract
Optical Music Recognition (OMR) is the challenge of understanding the content of musical scores. Accurate detection of individual music objects is a critical step in processing musical documents because a failure at this stage corrupts any further processing. So far, all proposed methods were either limited to typeset music scores or were built to detect only a subset of the available classes of music symbols. In this work, we propose an end-to-end trainable object detector for music symbols that is capable of detecting almost the full vocabulary of modern music notation in handwritten music scores. By training deep convolutional neural networks on the recently released MUSCIMA++ dataset which has symbol-level annotations, we show that a machine learning approach can be used to accurately detect music objects with a mean average precision of over 80%.
Reference
A. Pacha, K. Choi, B. Coüasnon, Y. Ricquebourg, H. Eidenberger: "Handwritten Music Object Detection: Open Issues and Baseline Results"; Talk: 2018 13th IAPR Workshop on Document Analysis Systems (DAS), Wien; 04-2018; in: "2018 13th IAPR Workshop on Document Analysis Systems (DAS)", (2018), 6 pages.
BibTeX
Click into the text area and press Ctrl+A/Ctrl+C or ⌘+A/⌘+C to copy the BibTeX into your clipboard… or download the BibTeX.