Philip Schofield, Joan Puigcerver Pérez, Markus Diem, Lauri Hirvonen, Tobias Hodel, Enrique Vidal, Hervé Déjean, Basilis Gatos, Tamara Terbul, Vicente Bosch, Konstantinos Zagoris, Mario Kallio, Florian Kleber, M. Bryan, Louise Seaward, Eva Lang, Alejandro Héctor Toselli, Vili Haukkovaara, Nathanael Philipp, Georgios Louloudis, Sören Laube, Sebastian Colutto, Tobias Strauß, Guenter Muehlberger, Christian Sieber, Johannes Michael, Matti Jokinen, Stefan Fiel, Albert Greinoecker, Hannelore Putz, George Retsinas, Herbert Wurster, Mauricio Villegas, Rory McNicholl, Nikolaos Stamatopoulos, Gundram Leifert, Frédéric Kaplan, Roger Labahn, Tobias Grüning, Gerhard Heyer, Joan Andreu Sánchez, Giorgos Sfikas, Elena Mühlbauer, Ioannis Pratikakis, Verónica Romero, Jean-Luc Meunier, Max Weidemann, Berthold Ulreich, Philip Kahle, Sofia Ares Oliveira, Guenter Hackl, Robert Sablatnig, Johanna Walcher, Melissa Terras, University of Zurich, and Seaward, Louise
Purpose An overview of the current use of handwritten text recognition (HTR) on archival manuscript material, as provided by the EU H2020 funded Transkribus platform. It explains HTR, demonstrates Transkribus, gives examples of use cases, highlights the affect HTR may have on scholarship, and evidences this turning point of the advanced use of digitised heritage content. The paper aims to discuss these issues. Design/methodology/approach This paper adopts a case study approach, using the development and delivery of the one openly available HTR platform for manuscript material. Findings Transkribus has demonstrated that HTR is now a useable technology that can be employed in conjunction with mass digitisation to generate accurate transcripts of archival material. Use cases are demonstrated, and a cooperative model is suggested as a way to ensure sustainability and scaling of the platform. However, funding and resourcing issues are identified. Research limitations/implications The paper presents results from projects: further user studies could be undertaken involving interviews, surveys, etc. Practical implications Only HTR provided via Transkribus is covered: however, this is the only publicly available platform for HTR on individual collections of historical documents at time of writing and it represents the current state-of-the-art in this field. Social implications The increased access to information contained within historical texts has the potential to be transformational for both institutions and individuals. Originality/value This is the first published overview of how HTR is used by a wide archival studies community, reporting and showcasing current application of handwriting technology in the cultural heritage sector.