Researchers at University College London have taught a computer to imitate anyone's handwriting.
They have created an algorithm that can take a sample of handwritten
text, examine its qualities, and then write any text in the same style.There
are already typefaces in word processing programs that produce text in a
fairly uniform handwritten style. But what Tom Haines and his fellow
UCL researchers have done is create software that they claim reproduces
the messy details of any individual writer's hand.They call their
system My Text In Your Handwriting and have tried it out on samples of
handwritten text from historical figures such as Abraham Lincoln and the
creator of Sherlock Holmes Sir Arthur Conan Doyle.While Conan
Doyle never actually wrote "Elementary, my dear Watson..." the UCL team
have now produced that sentence in his handwriting.
Handy writing
I gave Tom Haines a uniquely difficult challenge.My
handwriting has always been bad. A messy scrawl that even my family
struggles to decipher. I supplied Tom with a sample written on paper
with a ballpoint pen - other programs have relied on text written on a
tablet, which gives a less accurate input.He began the process by
using a program that marked up each letter and punctuation mark,
analysing in some detail how I wrote. The fact that I sometimes dotted
the letter i and in other cases did not was just one wrinkle.Then when the analysis was complete he fed it into the algorithm and typed the word "hello" into a box.Alongside,
a barely legible "hello" appeared - but I had to admit it was a fair
approximation of my scrawl. We then tried it out with a whole sentence -
and again I have to admit the result was just as bad as I might have
produced. Clever - but what practical uses does this handwriting algorithm have?One
example is where banks send out sensitive documents or new credit cards
and want to disguise the letters so that they look like handwritten
personal letters. The researchers showed me three hand-addressed letters
- one of them produced by the computer, two genuinely hand-written. I
struggled to work out which was which - see if you can do any better.
Another possible commercial use is in the personal messages that are
inserted with flowers or presents sent by delivery firms - how much
better to have a "genuine" handwritten "Happy Birthday" than something
typed on a card.You might think that another potential use was by
criminals attempting to forge your signature. But the researchers say
that close examination with a microscope will still reveal what was
written by a real human being and what was machine-generated.
* Image 2 was done by computer but the other two were written by a human.
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