Difference between revisions of "Labels of strokes in a subset of HOMUS Dataset"

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[[file:StrokeExamples.png|thumb|upright=0.4|frame|none|alt=Alt text|Examples of 23 strokes]]
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[[file:StrokeExamples.png|thumb|upright=0.2|frame|none|alt=Alt text|Examples of 23 strokes]]
 
[[file:SymbolExamples.png|800px|frame|none|alt=Alt text|Examples of 24 symbols in a subset of HOMUS dataset]]
 
[[file:SymbolExamples.png|800px|frame|none|alt=Alt text|Examples of 24 symbols in a subset of HOMUS dataset]]
  

Revision as of 19:58, 12 July 2016

This page is under construction!


The Handwritten Online Musical Symbols (HOMUS) dataset<ref>http://grfia.dlsi.ua.es/homus/</ref> consists of 15200 musical notations or symbols collected from 100 musicians. Each symbol belongs to one of 32 classes in the consideration that the eighth, sixteenth, thirty-second, and sixty-fourth note symbols and their horizontally inverted symbols are included in the same classes, respectively. Each symbol sample in this dataset consists of at least one stroke and a stroke is defined as a sequence of two dimensional points, which are the successive locations of a stylus pen on a device in time sequence while the pen touches the device. Nonetheless, the dataset does not serve labels corresponding to the strokes of symbols in the dataset. We consider a musical symbol as a set of strokes<ref>J. Calvo-Zaragoza and J. Oncina, "Recognition of Pen-Based Music Notation: The HOMUS Dataset", Proceedings of 2014 22nd International Conference on Pattern Recognition (ICPR), pp. 3038-3034.</ref>.


Alt text
Examples of 23 strokes
Alt text
Examples of 24 symbols in a subset of HOMUS dataset


References

<references />

Contact

Sung Joon Son, Ph.D. candidate, E-mail: sjson718_at_snu_dot_ac_dot_kr