Overview
- Editors:
-
-
Andreas Dengel
-
Knowledge Management Department, German Research Center for Artificial Intelligence (DFKI) GmbH, Kaiserslautern, Germany
-
Markus Junker
-
German Research Center for Artificial Intelligence (DFKI), Kaiserslautern, Germany
-
Anette Weisbecker
-
Institute for Human Factors and Technology Management, University of Stuttgart, Stuttgart, Germany
Access this book
Other ways to access
About this book
The amounts of information that are ?ooding people both at the workplace and in private life have increased dramatically in the past ten years. The number of paper documents doubles every four years, and the amount of information stored on all data carriers every six years. New knowledge, however, increases at a considerably lower rate. Possibilities for automatic content recognition in various media and for the processing of documents are therefore becoming more important every day. Especially in economic terms, the e?cient handling of information, i.e., ?- ing the right information at the right time, is an invaluable resource for any enterprise, but it is particularly important for small- and medium-sized ent- prises. The market for document management systems, which in Europe had a volume of approximately 5 billion euros in 2000, will increase considerably over the next few years. The BMBF recognized this development at an early stage. As early as in 1995, it pooled national capabilities in this ?eld in order to support research on the automatic processing of information within the framework of a large collaborative project (READ) involving both industrial companies and research centres. Evaluation of the results led to the conclusion that research work had been successful, and, in a second phase, funding was provided for the colla- rative follow-up project Adaptive READ from 1999 to 2003. The completion of thesetwoimportantlong-termresearchprojectshascontributedsubstantiallyto improving the possibilities of content recognition and processing of handwritten, printed and electronic documents.
Similar content being viewed by others
Article
21 September 2019
Table of contents (18 chapters)
-
-
- Dirk Woitha, Dietmar Janich
Pages 1-13
-
- Dirk Woitha, Dietmar Janich
Pages 14-25
-
- Bernhard Frei, Marin Hund, Markus Schnitzlein
Pages 26-36
-
- R. Rebmann, B. Michaelis, G. Krell, U. Seiffert, F. Püschel
Pages 37-64
-
- G. Eberhardt, S. Römer, J. Saedler
Pages 65-90
-
- Michael Boldt, Christopher Asp
Pages 91-102
-
- Anja Brakensiek, Gerhard Rigoll
Pages 103-122
-
- Elke Wilczok, Wolfgang Lellmann
Pages 123-136
-
- Oliver Höß, Oliver Strauß, Anette Weisbecker
Pages 137-152
-
- Matthias Middendorf, Carsten Peust, Johannes Schacht
Pages 153-165
-
- Bertin Klein, Andreas R. Dengel, Andreas Fordan
Pages 166-186
-
- Hartmut Schäfer, Thomas Bayer, Klaus Kreuzer, Udo Miletzki, Marc-Peter Schambach, Matthias Schulte-Austum
Pages 187-215
-
- Jens Drawehn, Christoph Altenhofen, Mirjana Stanišić-Petrović, Anette Weisbecker
Pages 216-234
-
- Ulrich Bohnacker, Jürgen Franke, Heike Mogg-Schneider, Ingrid Renz
Pages 235-251
-
-
-
- Koichi Kise, Markus Junker, Andreas Dengel, Keinosuke Matsumoto
Pages 306-327
-
- Christoph Altenhofen, Haigo R. Hofmann, Thomas Kieninger, Mirjana Stanišić-Petrović
Pages 328-354
-
Editors and Affiliations
-
Knowledge Management Department, German Research Center for Artificial Intelligence (DFKI) GmbH, Kaiserslautern, Germany
Andreas Dengel
-
German Research Center for Artificial Intelligence (DFKI), Kaiserslautern, Germany
Markus Junker
-
Institute for Human Factors and Technology Management, University of Stuttgart, Stuttgart, Germany
Anette Weisbecker