In this article, a system to detect rooms in architectural floor plan images is described. We first present a primitive extraction algorithm for line detection. It is based on an original coupling of classical Hough transform with image vectorization in order to perform robust and efficient line detection. We show how the lines that satisfy some graphical arrangements are combined into walls. We also present the way we detect some door hypothesis thanks to the extraction of arcs. Walls and door hypothesis are then used by our room segmentation strategy; it consists in recursively decomposing the image until getting nearly convex regions. The notion of convexity is difficult to quantify, and the selection of separation lines between regions can also be rough. We take advantage of knowledge associated to architectural floor plans in order to obtain mostly rectangular rooms. Qualitative and quantitative evaluations performed on a corpus of real documents show promising results.
In this paper, we present a new generic method for an interactive interpretation of sketches. This method is based on a competitive breadth-first exploration of the analysis tree. As opposed to well known structural approaches, this method allows to evaluate simultaneously several possible hypotheses of recognition in a dynamic local context of document. At each step of the analysis, the decision process selects the best hypotheses. If it detects an ambiguity, it will solicit the user to select the right hypothesis. In fact, the user participation has a great impact to avoid error accumulation during the analysis step and overcomes the combinatory due to the sketch complexity. This paper demonstrates this interactive method on 2D architectural floor plans.
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