Table extraction
Table extraction is the process of recognizing and separating a table from a large document, possibly also recognizing individual rows, columns or elements. It may be regarded as a special form of information extraction.
Table extractions from webpages can take advantage of the special HTML elements that exist for tables, e.g., the "table" tag, and programming libraries may implement table extraction from webpages. The Python pandas software library can extract tables from HTML webpages via its read_html() function.
More challenging is table extraction from PDFs or scanned images, where there usually is no table-specific machine readable markup.[1] Systems that extract data from tables in scientific PDFs have been described.[2][3]
Wikipedia presents some of its information in tables, and, e.g., 3.5 million tables can be extracted from the English Wikipedia.[4] Some of the tables have a specific format, e.g., the so-called infoboxes. Large-scale table extraction of Wikipedia infoboxes forms one of the sources for DBpedia.[5]
Commercial web services for table extraction exist, e.g., Amazon Textract, Google's Document AI, IBM Watson Discovery, and Microsoft Form Recognizer.[1] Open source tools also exist, e.g., PDFFigures 2.0 that has been used in Semantic Scholar.[6] In a comparison published in 2017, the researchers found the proprietary program ABBYY FineReader to yield the best PDF table extraction performance among six different tools evaluated.[7]
References
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 , Wikidata Q108170445
- ↑ , Wikidata Q108172460
- ↑ , Wikidata Q101086651
- ↑ , Wikidata Q108215401
- ↑ , Wikidata Q27910422
- ↑ , Wikidata Q108172042
- ↑ , Wikidata Q108173686
Original source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Table extraction.
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