A comparative study of complexity of handwritten Bharati characters with that of major Indian scripts
This work addresses communication bottlenecks in India by proposing a common script, but it is incremental as it builds on existing scripts and complexity theories.
The authors introduced Bharati, a novel script designed to represent most contemporary Indian languages using simple shapes from existing scripts, and demonstrated through complexity analysis that it is simpler than nine major Indian scripts in most measures.
We present Bharati, a simple, novel script that can represent the characters of a majority of contemporary Indian scripts. The shapes/motifs of Bharati characters are drawn from some of the simplest characters of existing Indian scripts. Bharati characters are designed such that they strictly reflect the underlying phonetic organization, thereby attributing to the script qualities of simplicity, familiarity, ease of acquisition and use. Thus, employing Bharati script as a common script for a majority of Indian languages can ameliorate several existing communication bottlenecks in India. We perform a complexity analysis of handwritten Bharati script and compare its complexity with that of 9 major Indian scripts. The measures of complexity are derived from a theory of handwritten characters based on Catastrophe theory. Bharati script is shown to be simpler than the 9 major Indian scripts in most measures of complexity.