Optical music recognition: State-of-the-art and open issues
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Data
2012
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Springer
Idioma
Inglês
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Resumo
For centuries, music has been shared and remembered
by two traditions: aural transmission and in the form
of written documents normally called musical scores. Many
of these scores exist in the form of unpublished manuscripts
and hence they are in danger of being lost through the normal
ravages of time. To preserve the music requires some
form of typesetting or, ideally, a computer system that can
automatically decode the symbolic images and create new
scores. Programs analogous to optical character recognition
systems called optical music recognition (OMR) systems
have been under intensive development for many years. However,
the results to date are far from ideal. Each of the proposed
methods emphasizes different properties and therefore
makes it difficult to effectively evaluate its competitive
advantages. This article provides an overview of the literature
concerning the automatic analysis of images of printed
and handwritten musical scores. For self-containment and
for the benefit of the reader, an introduction to OMR processing
systems precedes the literature overview. The following
study presents a reference scheme for any researcher wanting to compare new OMR algorithms against well-known ones.
Palavras-chave
Computer music, Image processing, Machine learning, Music performance
Tipo de Documento
Artigo
Versão da Editora
10.1007/s13735-012-0004-6
Dataset
Citação
Rebelo, A., Fujinaga, I., Paszkiewicz, F., Marcal, A. R. S., Guedes, C., & Cardoso, J. S. (2012). Optical music recognition: State-of-the-art and open issues. International Journal of Multimedia Information Retrieval, 1, 173-190. doi: 10.1007/s13735-012-0004-6. Disponível no Repositório UPT, http://hdl.handle.net/11328/2505
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Acesso Aberto
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Apoio
Portuguese Foundation for Science and Technology) within project SFRH/BD/60359/2009