Google has just announced a new model technology called Insight, which it's calling an 'offline to online handwriting conversion tool'. Basically that means scanning a photo of handwritten text and extracting the letters using AI rather than optical scanning as with OCR.
The team has trained the model so it can actually 'read' and recognize words, and then employ digital handwriting methods to output accurate letters.
The developers claim that doing this handwriting conversion digitally is more resilient across various scenarios, such as dealing with badly lit photo sources and on-page artifacts. The fun, and maybe useful, feature is its ability to output digital content in the shape of normal handwriting.
For example, the team is suggesting that users could take their handwritten notes, convert them to a digital clone of their handwriting, edit the digital form, and then re-export the result in their original handwriting.
The result of all this could be a document archive containing handwritten notes which could be freely edited, and yet retain the character of the original notes in digital form. It's like having an indestructible version of your personal notes, available online, or on your computer, for permanent access.
Unsurprisingly a lot of interest in the new technology has come from academia and other groups, who have struggled for years to make OCR and scanners fit the need for fast, accurate notation and storage.
This becomes even more acute for field workers who don't have access to specialized equipment. Think archaeological dig notes, insurance assessments and other similar situations.
At the moment their options are to store scrappy-paper notes or use pen and tablet-based computer transcription, which comes with its own set of accuracy issues.
The technology is still in the research stage at the moment, but the results are looking promising for future development.
The team at Google has conducted tests showing that the output from the new models -- they've released three different-sized versions -- delivered results that in 87% of cases were considered good or with only minor defects.
It remains to be seen how long it will take before this form of AI reaches the hands of the public. But anyone who's ever struggled with reading a GP's prescription will cheer from the sidelines when it eventually does arrive.