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Tabular Information Extraction from Datasheets with Deep Learning for Semantic Modeling

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Date

2022-03-22

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Publisher

Université d'Ottawa / University of Ottawa

Creative Commons

CC0 1.0 Universal

Abstract

The growing popularity of artificial intelligence and machine learning has led to the adop- tion of the automation vision in the industry by many other institutions and organizations. Many corporations have made it their primary objective to make the delivery of goods and services and manufacturing in a more efficient way with minimal human intervention. Au- tomated document processing and analysis is also a critical component of this cycle for many organizations that contribute to the supply chain. The massive volume and diver- sity of data created in this rapidly evolving environment make this a highly desired step. Despite this diversity, important information in the documents is provided in the tables. As a result, extracting tabular data is a crucial aspect of document processing. This thesis applies deep learning methodologies to detect table structure elements for the extraction of data and preparation for semantic modelling. In order to find optimal structure definition, we analyzed the performance of deep learning models in different formats such as row/column and cell. The combined row and column detection models perform poorly compared to other models’ detection performance due to the highly over- lapping nature of rows and columns. Separate row and column detection models seem to achieve the best average F1-score with 78.5% and 79.1%, respectively. However, de- termining cell elements from the row and column detections for semantic modelling is a complicated task due to spanning rows and columns. Considering these facts, a new method is proposed to set the ground-truth information called a content-focused annota- tion to define table elements better. Our content-focused method is competent in handling ambiguities caused by huge white spaces and lack of boundary lines in table structures; hence, it provides higher accuracy. Prior works have addressed the table analysis problem under table detection and table structure detection tasks. However, the impact of dataset structures on table structure detection has not been investigated. We provide a comparison of table structure detection performance with cropped and uncropped datasets. The cropped set consists of only table images that are cropped from documents assuming tables are detected perfectly. The uncropped set consists of regular document images. Experiments show that deep learning models can improve the detection performance by up to 9% in average precision and average recall on the cropped versions. Furthermore, the impact of cropped images is negligible under the Intersection over Union (IoU) values of 50%-70% when compared to the uncropped versions. However, beyond 70% IoU thresholds, cropped datasets provide significantly higher detection performance.

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Keywords

Deep Learning, Convolutional Neural Networks, Image Processing, Document Processing, Table Structure Detection, Table Detection, Tabular Data Extraction, Page Object Detection

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