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Writer Characterization and Identification in Short Modern and Historical Documents: Reconsidering Paleographic Tables

EasyChair Preprint 1324

4 pagesDate: July 22, 2019

Abstract

Handwriting is considered a unique “fingerprint” that characterizes a scribe (it is even used as evidence in modern forensics). In paleography (the study of ancient writing), it is presumed that each writer has a one prototype for each letter in the alphabet. Commonly, for ancient inscriptions, letters are organized into paleographic tables (where the rows are the alphabet letters, and the columns represent the examined inscriptions). These tables play a significant role in dating inscriptions based on their resemblance to columns in the table. In this paper, we argue that each scribe "fingerprint" is not represented by a single character prototype, but in fact by a distribution of characters. We introduce a framework for automatically identifying the writer style and constructing paleographic tables based on character histograms. Subsequently, we propose a method for comparing short documents utilizing letter distribution. We demonstrate the validity of the methods on two handwritten datasets: Modern and Ancient Hebrew pertaining to the First Temple period. Our methodology on the ancient dataset enables us to provide additional evidence concerning the level of literacy in the kingdom of Judah ca. 600 BCE.

Keyphrases: Epigraphy, First Temple Period, Hebrew ostraca, handwriting identification, hardwiring comparison, historical documents, paleographic tables

BibTeX entry
BibTeX does not have the right entry for preprints. This is a hack for producing the correct reference:
@booklet{EasyChair:1324,
  author    = {Shira Faigenbaum-Golovin and David Levin and Eli Piasetzky and Israel Finkelstein},
  title     = {Writer Characterization and Identification in Short Modern and Historical Documents: Reconsidering Paleographic Tables},
  howpublished = {EasyChair Preprint 1324},
  year      = {EasyChair, 2019}}
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