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Document Analysis and Recognition - 4th Workshop, DAR 2018, Held in Conjunction with ICVGIP 2018, Hyderabad, India, December 18, 2018, Revised Selected Papers (Paperback, 1st ed. 2019)
Suresh Sundaram, Gaurav Harit
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R1,521
Discovery Miles 15 210
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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1. This book constitutes the refereed proceedings of the 4th
Workshop on Document Analysis and Recognition, DAR 2018, held in
Conjunction with ICVGIP 2018, in Hyderabad, India, in December
2018. The 12 revised full papers and 2 short papers presented were
carefully reviewed and selected from 22 submissions. The papers are
organized in topical sections: document layout analysis and
understanding; handwriting recognition and symbol spotting;
character and word segmentation; handwriting analysis; datasets and
performance evaluation.
School bullying and cyberbullying are widely recognized as an
international problem, but publications have focused on the western
tradition of research. In India, recognition of these issues and
research on the topics have been emerging in recent years.
Beginning with cross-cultural differences across Indian, European
and Australian contexts, this volume provides direct empirical
comparisons between western and Indian situations. It then
discusses innovative ways of hearing the views of students,
pre-service teachers and teachers, featuring a range of qualitative
and quantitative methodologies. The concluding commentaries from
North American investigators provide a further international
perspective from another region where much progress in researching
these areas has been made. Together this ground-breaking collection
comprises contributions from four continents on the prevalent
issues of bullying, cyberbullying and student well-being.
School bullying and cyberbullying are widely recognized as an
international problem, but publications have focused on the western
tradition of research. In India, recognition of these issues and
research on the topics have been emerging in recent years.
Beginning with cross-cultural differences across Indian, European
and Australian contexts, this volume provides direct empirical
comparisons between western and Indian situations. It then
discusses innovative ways of hearing the views of students,
pre-service teachers and teachers, featuring a range of qualitative
and quantitative methodologies. The concluding commentaries from
North American investigators provide a further international
perspective from another region where much progress in researching
these areas has been made. Together this ground-breaking collection
comprises contributions from four continents on the prevalent
issues of bullying, cyberbullying and student well-being.
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