A comparative study of in-air trajectories at short and long distances in online handwriting
Carlos Alonso-Martinez, Marcos Faundez-Zanuy, Jiri Mekyska

TL;DR
This study investigates the often-overlooked in-air handwriting trajectories at different heights, analyzing their potential to improve biometric and pathological classification using a large multi-database set.
Contribution
It introduces the analysis of long-distance in-air handwriting movements, which are usually ignored due to device limitations, and evaluates their relevance for classification tasks.
Findings
Long-distance movements are a small part of total writing time.
Significant differences found between pathological and control groups in specific handwriting features.
Long-distance in-air trajectories have limited but notable potential for classification improvements.
Abstract
Introduction Existing literature about online handwriting analysis to support pathology diagnosis has taken advantage of in-air trajectories. A similar situation occurred in biometric security applications where the goal is to identify or verify an individual using his signature or handwriting. These studies do not consider the distance of the pen tip to the writing surface. This is due to the fact that current acquisition devices do not provide height formation. However, it is quite straightforward to differentiate movements at two different heights: a) short distance: height lower or equal to 1 cm above a surface of digitizer, the digitizer provides x and y coordinates. b) long distance: height exceeding 1 cm, the only information available is a time stamp that indicates the time that a specific stroke has spent at long distance. Although short distance has been used in several…
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