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Title Interactive Annotation of Geometric Ornamentation on Painted Pottery Assisted by Deep Learning
Authors Stefan Lengauer, Peter Houska, Reinhold Preiner, Elisabeth Trinkl, Stephan Karl, Iván Sipirán, Benjamin Bustos, Tobias Schreck
Publication date 2022
Abstract In Greek art, the phase from 900 to 700 BCE is referred to
as the
Geometric period due to the characteristically simple geometry-like
ornamentations appearing on painted pottery surfaces during this era.
Distinctive geometric patterns are typical for specific periods, regions,
workshops as well as painters and are an important cue for archaeological
tasks, such as dating and attribution. To date, these analyses are mostly
conducted with the support of information technology. The primitives of an
artefact's ornamentation can be generally classified into a set of
distinguishable pattern classes, which also appear in a similar fashion on
other objects. Although a taxonomy of known pattern classes is given in
subject-specific publications, the automatic detection and classification of
surface patterns from object depictions poses a non-trivial challenge. Our
long-term goal is to provide this classification functionality using a
specifically designed and trained neural network. This, however, requires a
large amount of labelled training data, which at this point does not exist
for this domain context. In this work, we propose an effective annotation
system, which allows a domain expert to interactively segment and label
parts of digitized vessel surfaces. These user inputs are constantly fed
back to a Convolutional Neural Network (CNN), enabling the prediction of
pattern classes for a given surface area with ever increasing precision. Our
work paves the way for a fully automatic classification and analysis of
large surface pattern collections, which, with the help of suitable visual
analysis techniques, can answer research questions like pattern variability
or change over time. While the capability of our proposed annotation
pipeline is demonstrated at the example of two characteristic Greek pottery
artefacts from the Geometric period, the proposed methods can be readily
adopted for the patternation in any other chronological periods as well as
for stamped motifs.
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Pages 217-231
Volume 64
Journal name IT - Information Technology
Publisher Walter de Gruyter (Berlin, Germany)
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