software

Testing AI for Transcribing Handwriting

My research often involves transcribing handwritten deeds, wills and other historical documents. It’s a painstaking task made even more difficult when documents and scanned images of documents have poor penmanship, are faded or damaged.


I’m finding artificial intelligence (AI) applications increasingly helpful in other areas. See especially the articles “Lafayette’s 1825 Visit to Northern Virginia” and “History of Virginia’s Culpeper Basin.” So I decided to test AI in transcribing a handwritten 1866 deed with Transkribus optical character recognition (OCR).

 

Transkribus is an online application that uses OCR and AI algorithms to transcribe handwritten characters into digital text. It faces the same challenges I do in dealing with faded, poorly written and otherwise difficult to read documents. Transkibus offers free credits to process a limited number of pages, and paid plans for higher use.

artificial intelligence, research, software

History of Virginia’s Culpeper Basin

The phrase “older than dirt” labels something as exceptionally old. Deep time is the term scientists use for the billions of years of Earth’s history. Both terms proved apt In researching the geography of my home in eastern Fauquier County. It is situated in the Culpeper Basin, a geological formation created about 200 million years ago by the forces that also created the Atlantic Ocean: plate tectonics. I created this short video to visualize the history of the Culpeper Basin.
artificial intelligence, geology, map, software, video