This application claims benefit of French patent application number 1651041, filed Feb. 10, 2016, which is herein incorporated by reference.
The invention relates to a method of sorting mailpieces in a postal sorting machine, and more particularly pre-sorted mailpieces, said method comprising the steps consisting in loading the mailpieces into a feed inlet of said machine, and in unstacking them one-by-one to cause them, in series, to go past a camera that forms a digital image of a current mailpiece including a delivery address, and then in causing a monitoring and control unit of the machine to operate, which unit, on the basis of the digital image of the current mailpiece, is suitable for automatically reading delivery address data by optical character recognition (OCR), and for comparing the result of that reading with a reference database so as to recognize the delivery address that corresponds to said current mailpiece in order to direct the current mailpiece automatically to a corresponding sorting outlet of the machine.
The method of the invention is, in this example, particularly adapted for being implemented in a delivery or inward-sorting postal center with pre-sorted mail coming from bulk mailers.
Description of the Related Art
It is known that mailpieces produced by a bulk mailer for several thousand recipients can be grouped together by the mailer, upstream from the inward sorting at the postal operator's facility, in batches corresponding to main geographical destinations for delivery or inward sorting.
This enables the postal operator to process each batch of pre-sorted mailpieces directly at the postal delivery or inward-sorting center that corresponds to the geographical zone of the batch without having to perform an outward-sorting pass.
During the machine inward sorting, the process of automatically recognizing the delivery addresses on the mailpieces uses all-destination OCR that searches the entire file of postal addresses at national level, which involves long processing time, especially if that requires video coding operations.
When the outward sorting is performed by the postal operator, the inward sorting is started while the mailpieces are being transported from the outward-sorting center to the inward-sorting center in order to save processing time.
With pre-sorted mail, there is no outward sorting, and so the entire processing time for recognizing the addresses must take place at the inward-sorting center, which gives rise to high operating costs for said inward-sorting center.
An object of the invention is thus to optimize the processing time for processing pre-sorted mail in order to reduce the operating costs at the postal operator's facility.
To this end, the invention provides a method of sorting mailpieces in a postal sorting machine, said method comprising the steps consisting in loading the mailpieces into a feed inlet of said machine, and in unstacking them one-by-one to cause them, in series, to go past a camera that forms a digital image of a current mailpiece including a delivery address, and then in causing a monitoring and control unit of the machine to operate, which unit, on the basis of the digital image of the current mailpiece, is suitable for automatically reading delivery address data by OCR, and for comparing the result of that reading with a reference database so as to recognize the delivery address that corresponds to said current mailpiece in order to direct the current mailpiece automatically to a corresponding sorting outlet of the machine, said method being characterized in that it further comprises the steps consisting in:
The basic idea of the invention is thus to use the bulk mailer's prior knowledge of the delivery addresses of the pre-sorted mailpieces. The bulk mailer produces the mailpieces on the basis of a database of recipient postal addresses that is reliable.
It therefore suffices for the bulk mailer to send to the postal operator a segment of the postal reference database, which segment corresponds, on each occasion, to a batch of mailpieces that are already pre-sorted for a main destination so as to constitute a lexicon of reduced size that is used by automatic address recognition in the postal sorting machine at the postal operator's facility.
Automatic address recognition using the results of the OCR reading is thus based on a lexical search having a small scope, namely a few hundred words or characters, instead of several hundreds of thousands for conventional all-destination recognition, thereby considerably reducing the processing times. This recognition using a small lexicon also makes it possible to tolerate delivery addresses that are not properly structured at syntax level.
The method of the invention may also have the following features:
The present invention can be better understood and other advantages appear on reading the following description and on examining the accompanying drawings, in which:
The mailpieces P may be letters, catalogs, parcels, or any other type of mailpiece.
As shown in
In practice, with the method of the invention, a mailer produces (using bulk mailing techniques) a batch of mailpieces on the basis of a recipient address database, all of the mailpieces having addresses within a certain geographical zone corresponding to a main postal delivery or inward-sorting destination.
When the batch of mailpieces is formed, the mailer associates the batch with a unique identifier for identifying a batch of pre-sorted mailpieces. The association can be achieved by affixing the unique identify in the form of a bar code on the wall of a storage tray for storing the batch of mailpieces. Without restricting the scope of the invention, the batch identifier may be in the form of an identifier that can be detected automatically or that can be loaded manually by an operator into the unit 8.
In addition, the mailer builds a lexicon in an electronic file having, for example, the unique identifier of the batch as its logical name, which lexicon is indicated by D in
The identification code for identifying the batch, together with the batch of the pre-sorted mailpieces and the small lexicon are transmitted to the postal operator who is to deliver the mailpieces of the batch. The lexicon may be transmitted by electronic messaging, for example.
The sorting method of the invention that is implemented at the postal operator's facility consists in the following steps, described with reference to
At 100 in
At 200, the code 4 that is read by means of the reader 10 is detected by the unit 8 as being an identification code identifying a batch 2 of pre-sorted mailpieces and so the unit 8 performs special processing of said mailpieces by implementing the following steps.
In response to the detection, in step 300, the unit 8 loads the lexicon D into the reference database 9 of the address recognition system.
In step 400, unstacking of the mailpieces stored in the feed inlet starts, and a current mailpiece P is unstacked and enters the sorting conveyor 6.
In step 500, the image-taking system forms a digital image of the current mailpiece P that includes the delivery address affixed on said mailpiece.
In step 600, the unit 8 performs optical character recognition (OCR) so as to read the postal address data derived automatically from the digital image (from the successions of alphanumeric symbols or characters that can constitute postal address field values: street number, street, postal code, city), and, in step 700, it compares the result of the OCR reading of step 600 with the recipient addresses D1 in the lexicon D so as to evaluate similarity in order to recognize the delivery address that corresponds to said current mailpiece.
After the delivery address has been recognized properly, the process continues in step 800, in which the unit 8 controls the sorting conveyor so as to cause it to direct the current mailpiece P to a corresponding sorting outlet 7.
In a variant embodiment of the invention that is shown in
In this variant embodiment of the invention, it may be necessary to perform structuring and indexing pre-processing at the mailer's facility or at the postal operator's facility in order to be able to scan through this data by using a standard postal information recognition process.
As shown in
More particularly, in this step 900, it should be understood that a single item of data D2 (in association with a delivery address) may be highly discriminating for match evaluation if it is unique in the lexicon D.
If, in step 900, a match is detected with an item of data D2 in the lexicon D, then the unit 8 retrieves, by association, a corresponding postal address D1 from the lexicon D, and continues the process at step 800.
In practice, the comparisons in steps 700 and 900 can also be performed in parallel (as indicated by the arrow between the blocks 600 and 900 in
It should be noted that, in the lexicon D, the delivery address data D1 may be sequenced in compliance with the sequence of the pre-sorted mailpieces in the batch. The lexicon D in the form of a file may also contain a header that describes the location and orientation of the address block in the image of a mailpiece so as to guide the OCR to a detection zone in the image. It may also contain an indication of the number of mailpieces in the batch, thereby enabling a reliability check to be made.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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1651041 | Feb 2016 | FR | national |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
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20090110284 | Lamprecht | Apr 2009 | A1 |
20120116573 | Benyoub | May 2012 | A1 |
20140072167 | Miette | Mar 2014 | A1 |
20140222192 | Roch | Aug 2014 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country |
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102007038186 | Feb 2009 | DE |
1920852 | May 2008 | EP |
0000300 | Jan 2000 | WO |
Entry |
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French Search Report dated Oct. 10, 2016, for Application No. 1651041. |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20170225201 A1 | Aug 2017 | US |