Early printed edition and OCR techniques: what is the state-of-art? Strategies to be developed from the working-progress Mambrino project work
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.13136/2284-2667/65Keywords:
Transcription, digital scholarly edition, OCR, Digital Humanities, Mambrino ProjectAbstract
Some thoughts of a workin-progress digital edition project. Limits and advantages of OCR (Optical Character Recognition) techiques. The use of Transkribus.
Downloads
Published
2016-12-23
Issue
Section
Miscellanea
License
Copyright (c) 2016 Tiziana Mancinelli
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License.
Authors must attend to the following conditions:- Authors will mantain the copyright of their work and leave to the journal first publishing rights, simultaneously licensed by a Creative Common License - Attribution - No Commercial Use that permits other researchers to share the work indicating the intellectual property of the author and the first publishing in this journal not for commercial use.
- Authors can adhere to other license agreements not exclusive to the distribution of the published version of their work (for example: include it in an institutional archive or publish it in a monografic book), with the agreement of indicating that the first publishing belongs to this journal.
- Authors can disseminate their work (for example in institutional repositories or their personal website) before and during the submission procedure, as it can lead to advantageous exchanges and citations of the work (see also, The Effect of Open Access).