Aiding Manipulation of Handwritten Mathmatical Expressions through
Style Preserving Morphs
by Richard Zanibbi, Kevin Novins, James Arvo and Katherine Zanibbi Proceedings of Graphics Interface 2001, pp. 127-134, Canadian Information
Processing Society, June 2001.
Abstract
We describe a technique for enhancing a user’s ability
to manipulate hand-printed symbolic information by automatically
improving legibility and simultaneously providing
immediate feedback on the system’s current structural
interpretation of the information. Our initial application
is a handwriting-based equation editor. Once
the user has written a formula, the individual hand-drawn
symbols can be gradually translated and scaled to closely
approximate their relative positions and sizes in a corresponding
typeset version. These transformations preserve
the characteristics, or style, of the original userdrawn
symbols. In applying this style-preserving morph,
the system improves the legibility of the user-drawn symbols
by correcting alignment and scaling, and also reveals
the baseline structure of the symbols that has been inferred
by system. We performed a preliminary user study
that indicates that this new method of feedback is a useful
addition to a conventional interpretive interface. We
believe this is because the style preserving morph makes
it easier to understand the correspondence between the
original input and interpreted output than methods that
radically change the appearance of the original input.
Availability
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Last modified: December 2003.