Affiliation:
1. GLA University, Mathura, India
2. King Faisal University, Saudi Arabia
3. Persian Gulf University, Iran
4. King Abdulaziz University, Saudi Arabia
5. Jamia Hamdard, India
Abstract
The rapid growth of Web 2.0, which enables people to generate, communicate, and share information, has resulted in an increase in the total number of users. In developing countries, online users’ sentiment influences decision-making, social views, individual consumption decisions, and entity quality monitoring. As a result, more accurate sentiment analysis, particularly in their native language such as Hindi, is preferred over crude binary categorization. Because of the abundance of web-based data in Indian languages such as Hindi, Marathi, Kannada, Tamil, and so on. Analyzing this data and recovering valuable and relevant information from handwritten text has become extremely important. Despite years of research and development, no optical writing recognition (OCR) system has ever been certified as completely reliable. The first step in any pattern recognition system is feature selection. In many fields, feature selection is studied as a combinatorial optimization problem. The primary goal of feature selection is to reduce the number of redundant and ineffective traits in the recognition system. This feature selection is used to maintain or improve the performance of the classifier used by the recognition system: A support vector machine (SVM) technique could be used to solve this character recognition problem. The Hindi character recognition system recognizes Hindi characters by employing morphological operations, edge detection, HOG feature extraction, and an SVM-based classifier. The proposed model outperformed the current state-of-the-art method, achieving an accuracy of 96.77 %.
Publisher
Association for Computing Machinery (ACM)
Cited by
2 articles.
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