Fig. 9: Examples of the impact of non-homologous rubbing retrieval with high content similarity. | npj Heritage Science

Fig. 9: Examples of the impact of non-homologous rubbing retrieval with high content similarity.

From: An open benchmark for oracle bone rubbing image retrieval

Fig. 9

a The blue box on the black oracle bone represents the unclear glyph caused by the cracking and wear of the oracle bone, and the same glyph of the homologous rubbing pointed by the blue line completes the glyph, and the combination of the two gives the clear glyph in the blue box in the blank area. b The blue box represents the complete glyph, which completes the incomplete glyph on the homologous rubbing, which is pointed by the blue arrow. c The blue box is used to indicate the words in the homologous oracle bone fragment on the left, and the red box is used to represent the words in the homologous oracle bone fragment on the right. They have a complementary relationship, enabling the assembly of a more complete example of inscription groups.

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