New computer algorithms to aid historical research of ancient Hebrew and Arabic documents
August 16th, 2009 - 11:59 am ICT by ANIJerusalem, August 16 (ANI): Researchers at Ben-Gurion University of the Negev (BGU) in Israel are all set to use new computer algorithms in a new project to analyze historic Hebrew and Arabic documents.
The effort to develop new computer algorithms will help provide scholars with valuable answers regarding Jewish liturgical texts and Arabic historical texts.
The technical goal of the research is to develop new state of the art algorithms for analyzing text and combine them into an easy to operate, open source system of tools to aid historical document research throughout the world.
Experiments are being conducted on degraded documents from sources such as the Cairo Geniza, copies of which are located at the national liturgy project at BGU, the El-Aqsa manuscript library in Jerusalem and the Al-Azar manuscript library in Cairo.
Most fragments that have been discovered at the Geniza are now in libraries at Cambridge and Oxford universities, the Jewish Theological Seminary in New York, The British Library and in Israel and Paris.
Until now, the documents have not been researched systematically.
According to Professor Uri Ehrlich of the Goldstein-Goren Department of Jewish Thought, “There was one book that was originally used as a Hebrew prayer book from the 12th century, but had been scratched off, and the parchment used to write an Arabic text (called a palimpsest).”
“Our aim was to read the first book and not the second book. So, we needed to find out how the Arab book could disappear and would leave only the Hebrew letters of the original book. This is why the computer sciences and humanities departments at BGU decided to collaborate,” he said.
“To solve the problem, we created an algorithm to cover the text in a dark grey color, which then highlights lighter colored pixels as background space and identifies the darker pixels as outlining the original Hebrew lettering,” said Professor Klara Kedem of the Department of Computer Sciences and one of the system’s creators.
Many of the new methods will apply to other languages as well, including binarization of highly degraded documents, segmentation of skewed and curved lines and word spotting in both curved and highly degraded documents.
Other algorithms will be more language specific, such as paleographic analysis of Hebrew and Arabic historical documents that will include automatic indexing of document collections, determining authorship, location and date of the documents. (ANI)
- Israel, Google to bring Dead Sea Scrolls online - Oct 20, 2010
- Einstein's archives to be digitised - Mar 15, 2011
- New algorithm identifies ghost writing in Old Testament - Oct 12, 2011
- Kashmir University digitises rare manuscripts - Mar 07, 2011
- Now, software to detect sarcasm - May 20, 2010
- Vatican stores computer chip fitted books in bombproof bunker - Sep 14, 2010
- Two parts of 1,300-year-old biblical manuscript reunited - Feb 27, 2010
- Dead Sea Scrolls Mystery Possibly Solved - Jul 31, 2010
- Einstein's letters, documents go online - Mar 20, 2012
- Language may influence how you think about others - Jul 13, 2010
- The book 'no one can read' dates back to 15th century - Feb 11, 2011
- Einstein's manuscript on display in Israel - Mar 08, 2010
- History Channel Features The Library Of Congress On "Modern Marvels" - Jun 11, 2010
- Who authored Dead Sea Scrolls? - Jul 28, 2010
- Dead Sea Scrolls Mystery Yet To Be Solved - Jul 30, 2010
Tags: ancient hebrew, arabic documents, arabic text, art algorithms, ben gurion university, bgu, cairo geniza, colored pixels, document research, hebrew lettering, hebrew letters, hebrew prayer, jewish theological seminary, liturgical texts, manuscript library, open source system, oxford universities, prayer book, technical goal, world experiments