CVFeb 20, 2025

Money Recognition for the Visually Impaired: A Case Study on Sri Lankan Banknotes

arXiv:2502.14267v11 citations
Originality Synthesis-oriented
AI Analysis

This addresses accessibility and independence for visually impaired people in Sri Lanka, though it is incremental as it applies an existing method to a new dataset.

The research tackled the problem of currency note recognition for blind individuals by developing a user-friendly stand-alone system for Sri Lankan banknotes, achieving 0.9847 AP on validation and performing well in real-world scenarios.

Currency note recognition is a critical accessibility need for blind individuals, as identifying banknotes accurately can impact their independence and security in financial transactions. Several traditional and technological initiatives have been taken to date. Nevertheless, these approaches are less user-friendly and have made it more challenging for blind people to identify banknotes. This research proposes a user-friendly stand-alone system for the identification of Sri Lankan currency notes. A custom-created dataset of images of Sri Lankan currency notes was used to fine-tune an EfficientDet model. The currency note recognition model achieved 0.9847 AP on the validation dataset and performs exceptionally well in real-world scenarios. The high accuracy and the intuitive interface have enabled blind individuals to quickly and accurately identify currency denominations, ultimately encouraging accessibility and independence.

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