On herbarium sheets, data elements such as plant name, collection site, collector, barcode and accession number are found mostly on labels glued to the sheet. The data are thus visible on specimen images. With continuously improving technologies for collection mass-digitisation it has become easier and easier to produce high quality images of herbarium sheets and in the last few years herbarium collections worldwide have started to digitize specimens on an industrial scale (Tegelberg et al. 2014). To use the label data contained in these massive numbers of images, they have to be captured and databased. Currently, manual data entry prevails and forms the principal cost and time limitation in the digitization process. The StanDAP-Herb Projec...
Part of a training dataset of scanned herbarium specimens. The data paper and a summary landing page...
Herbaria around the world house millions of plant specimens; botanists and other researchers value t...
Herbaria around the world house millions of plant specimens; botanists and other researchers value t...
Over the past years, herbarium collections worldwide have started to digitize millions of specimens ...
Herbaria hold large numbers of specimens: approximately 22 million herbarium specimens exist as bota...
Based on own work on species and trait recognition and complementary studies from other working grou...
Hundreds of herbarium collections have accumulated a valuable heritage and knowledge of plants over ...
More and more herbaria are digitising their collections. Images of specimens are made available onli...
Historically, herbarium specimens have provided users with documented occurrences of plants in speci...
Historically, herbarium specimens have provided users with documented occurrences of plants in speci...
Herbarium specimens are a vital resource in botanical taxonomy. Many herbaria are undertaking large-...
Digitisation programmes in many institutes frequently involve disparate and irregular funding, diver...
At the Royal Botanic Garden Edinburgh (RBGE) the use of Optical Character Recognition (OCR) to aid t...
Digitisation of specimens at the Royal Botanic Garden Edinburgh (RBGE) has created nearly half a mil...
Part of a training dataset of scanned herbarium specimens. The data paper and a summary landing page...
Part of a training dataset of scanned herbarium specimens. The data paper and a summary landing page...
Herbaria around the world house millions of plant specimens; botanists and other researchers value t...
Herbaria around the world house millions of plant specimens; botanists and other researchers value t...
Over the past years, herbarium collections worldwide have started to digitize millions of specimens ...
Herbaria hold large numbers of specimens: approximately 22 million herbarium specimens exist as bota...
Based on own work on species and trait recognition and complementary studies from other working grou...
Hundreds of herbarium collections have accumulated a valuable heritage and knowledge of plants over ...
More and more herbaria are digitising their collections. Images of specimens are made available onli...
Historically, herbarium specimens have provided users with documented occurrences of plants in speci...
Historically, herbarium specimens have provided users with documented occurrences of plants in speci...
Herbarium specimens are a vital resource in botanical taxonomy. Many herbaria are undertaking large-...
Digitisation programmes in many institutes frequently involve disparate and irregular funding, diver...
At the Royal Botanic Garden Edinburgh (RBGE) the use of Optical Character Recognition (OCR) to aid t...
Digitisation of specimens at the Royal Botanic Garden Edinburgh (RBGE) has created nearly half a mil...
Part of a training dataset of scanned herbarium specimens. The data paper and a summary landing page...
Part of a training dataset of scanned herbarium specimens. The data paper and a summary landing page...
Herbaria around the world house millions of plant specimens; botanists and other researchers value t...
Herbaria around the world house millions of plant specimens; botanists and other researchers value t...