A table is an object that captures structured and informative content within a document, and recognizing a table in an image is challenging due to the complexity and variety of table layouts. Many previous works typically adopt a two-stage approach; (1) Table detection(TD) localizes the table region in an image and (2) Table Structure Recognition(TSR) identifies row- and column-wise adjacency relations between the cells. The use of a two-stage approach often entails the consequences of error propagation between the modules and raises training and inference inefficiency. In this work, we analyze the natural characteristics of a table, where a table is composed of cells and each cell is made up of borders consisting of edges. We propose a novel method to reconstruct the table in a bottom-up manner. Through a simple process, the proposed method separates cell boundaries from low-level features, such as corners and edges, and localizes table positions by combining the cells. A simple design makes the model easier to train and requires less computation than previous two-stage methods. We achieve state-of-the-art performance on the ICDAR2013 table competition benchmark and Wired Table in the Wild(WTW) dataset.
Recent end-to-end scene text spotters have achieved great improvement in recognizing arbitrary-shaped text instances. Common approaches for text spotting use region of interest pooling or segmentation masks to restrict features to single text instances. However, this makes it hard for the recognizer to decode correct sequences when the detection is not accurate i.e. one or more characters are cropped out. Considering that it is hard to accurately decide word boundaries with only the detector, we propose a novel Detection-agnostic End-to-End Recognizer, DEER, framework. The proposed method reduces the tight dependency between detection and recognition modules by bridging them with a single reference point for each text instance, instead of using detected regions. The proposed method allows the decoder to recognize the texts that are indicated by the reference point, with features from the whole image. Since only a single point is required to recognize the text, the proposed method enables text spotting without an arbitrarily-shaped detector or bounding polygon annotations. Experimental results present that the proposed method achieves competitive results on regular and arbitrarily-shaped text spotting benchmarks. Further analysis shows that DEER is robust to the detection errors. The code and dataset will be publicly available.