Automatic Die Studies for Ancient Numismatics
Abstract
Die studies are fundamental to quantifying ancient monetary production, providing insights into the relationship between coinage, politics, and history. The process requires tedious manual work, which limits the size of the corpora that can be studied. Few works have attempted to automate this task, and none have been properly released and evaluated from a computer vision perspective. We propose a fully automatic approach that introduces several innovations compared to previous methods. We rely on fast and robust local descriptors matching that is set automatically. Second, the core of our proposal is a clustering-based approach that uses an intrinsic metric (that does not need the ground truth labels) to determine its critical hyper-parameters. We validate the approach on two corpora of Greek coins, propose an automatic implementation and evaluation of previous baselines, and show that our approach significantly outperforms them.
Cite
Text
Cornet et al. "Automatic Die Studies for Ancient Numismatics." European Conference on Computer Vision Workshops, 2024. doi:10.1007/978-3-031-91572-7_15Markdown
[Cornet et al. "Automatic Die Studies for Ancient Numismatics." European Conference on Computer Vision Workshops, 2024.](https://mlanthology.org/eccvw/2024/cornet2024eccvw-automatic/) doi:10.1007/978-3-031-91572-7_15BibTeX
@inproceedings{cornet2024eccvw-automatic,
title = {{Automatic Die Studies for Ancient Numismatics}},
author = {Cornet, Clément and Aumaître, Héloïse and Besançon, Romaric and Olivier, Julien and Faucher, Thomas and Le Borgne, Hervé},
booktitle = {European Conference on Computer Vision Workshops},
year = {2024},
pages = {246-262},
doi = {10.1007/978-3-031-91572-7_15},
url = {https://mlanthology.org/eccvw/2024/cornet2024eccvw-automatic/}
}