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Freki

Freki is a package that takes the markup-language formatted output of a PDF-to-text extraction tool (either PDFLib TET or PDFMiner), and detects text blocks (e.g., paragraphs, headers, figures, etc.). The blocks are assigned attributes (identifiers, bounding boxes, etc.) for later analysis. This was developed for the detection of interlinear glossed text (IGT), but it could serve other purposes, as well.

Freki also includes a method to convert plain text documents to the Freki format for the purposes of IGT detection and language identification.

PDFMiner

PDFMiner is a required package for running Freki using the pdfminer option.

The following installation of PDFMiner is recommended, as using the Python Package Index (PyPI) installs a broken version:

pip install https://github.com/goulu/pdfminer/zipball/e6ad15af79a26c31f4e384d8427b375c93b03533#egg=pdfminer.six

PDFMiner converts PDF to text as its default setting. When using PDFMiner to convert a document to the formatted input of Freki, set the output type to be XML:

./tools/pdf2txt.py --output_file <output_file> --output_type xml

Example

Shown below are an example page from a PDF (left), and a visualization of the zones that Freki's xycut analyzer detected (right). In the visualization, colored blocks are text tokens, and the colors correspond to different text in different font sizes. The thick light-blue lines represent potential divisions ("cuts") between zones, while thin white lines represent the cuts that were made in the end. Each detected zone will be further analyzed for lines of text, and the result of this second-stage analysis is a Freki block.

PDF Anaylzed zones
PDF page Analyzed page

The output of Freki is text with block- and line-level metadata. The first few lines of such a block, with metadata, is given below:

doc_id=uw-stanford-system page=1 block_id=1-6 bbox=72.0,72.0,298.8,313.53 label=blbb 20 37
line=20 fonts=F1-10.9 bbox=72.0,302.62,298.8,313.53             :Over the past several years, a  series of shared tasks
line=21 fonts=F1-10.9 iscore=0.60 bbox=72.0,289.07,298.8,299.98 :have been organized   to foster research  on the auto-
line=22 fonts=F1-10.9 iscore=0.33 bbox=72.0,275.52,298.8,286.43 :matic detection of grammatical  errors in composi-
[...]

Note that each block and line get an identifier. Block- and line-level bounding-box coordinates are maintained, but token- and glyph-level ones are not. The lines also retain some information about the fonts that appeared on the line, as well as an iscore, which is a measure of the amount of interlinear alignment between a line and the one above it. A high iscore means that the tokens in a line are arranged in columns with the line above, rather than just free-flowing text. When Freki writes out blocks with high scores, it puts extra effort in maintaining columnar alignment among tokens in the lines. The effect of this is shown below, where tabular data was encountered in the PDF. If the columns are not explicitly maintained, the conversion from variable-width to fixed-with fonts can lead to tabular data becoming misaligned.

[...]
line=168 fonts=F1-9.0 iscore=0.75 bbox=102.53,635.22,509.47,644.18       :        <del>a </del>     1.45%     <ins>an </ins>    0.78%    <del>a</del><ins>the</ins>             0.56%
line=169 fonts=F1-9.0 iscore=0.88 bbox=102.53,624.26,509.47,633.23       :        <del>’</del>      1.29%     <ins>is </ins>    0.63%    <del>which</del><ins>that</ins>        0.54%
line=170 fonts=F1-9.0 iscore=1.00 bbox=102.53,613.3,509.47,622.27        :        <del>"</del>      0.91%     <ins>of </ins>    0.63%    <del>is</del><ins>are</ins>            0.54%
line=171 fonts=F0-9.0,F1-9.0 iscore=0.00 bbox=206.25,599.45,405.75,608.42:                                Table 2: Top ten deletions, insertions, and substitutions

Usage

Freki works on the XML output of PDFLib TET (e.g., with TET's --tetml wordplus option) or PDFMiner (e.g., with PDFMiner's -t xml option). Also note that when Freki is installed, the freki system command becomes available. Unix-based systems can run Freki without installing with the included freki.sh script.

usage: freki [-h] [-v] [--debug] [-r {tetml,pdfminer}] [-a {xycut}] [-z]
             infile outfile

Analyze the document structure of text in a PDF

positional arguments:
  infile
  outfile

optional arguments:
  -h, --help            show this help message and exit
  -v, --verbose         increase the verbosity (can be repeated: -vvv)
  --debug               show debugging visualizations
  -r {tetml,pdfminer}, --reader {tetml,pdfminer}
  -a {xycut}, --analyzer {xycut}
  -z, --gzip            gzip output file

For example, to analyze data from a PDFLib TET extraction:

  freki.sh --reader tetml sample/sample.tetml.gz sample/sample_tetml.txt

For data from a PDFMiner extraction:

freki.sh --reader pdfminer sample/sample.pdfminer.txt sample/sample_pdfminer.txt

Currently there is only one method for layout analysis (xycut), so it is not necessary to give the --analyzer option.

Plain Text to Freki Conversion

text-to-freki.sh is the preferred method of converting a text file to a Freki object.

The Chardet package is used to detect the encoding of the text file if reading using the given encoding causes an error, or if detect_encoding is set to True.

Usage:

Convert a plain text file to Freki format

positional arguments:
  infile                plain text file
  outfile               path to freki output file

optional arguments:
  -h, --help            show this help message and exit
  --igtfile IGTFILE     plain text file containing igt span info
  --encoding ENCODING   encoding of the input file
  -d DETECT, --detect-encoding DETECT
                        automatically detects encoding when set to true
  -v, --verbose         increase the verbosity (can be repeated: -vvv)

examples:
    text-to-freki in.txt out.freki --igtfile=igts.txt --detect-encoding=true

The igt_path file is in the format:

startline endline tag1 tag2 ... tagN\n

Each line represents an individual IGT span.

Example:

1 3 L G T
10 13 M+LN L G T
...

Requirements

Acknowledgements

Freki is part of the Xigt Project and ODIN, and acknowledges the same sources of funding.