Weitere Beispiele werden automatisch zu den Stichwörtern zugeordnet - wir garantieren ihre Korrektheit nicht.
Optical mark recognition has evolved from several other technologies.
He held several of the company's optical mark recognition patents in the United States.
Optical mark recognition is used to detect answers.
Such marks are closely related to the timing marks used in optical mark recognition.
The multiple-choice answers are marked by Cambridge Assessment using optical mark recognition.
The university had earlier had problems with the same exam when errors in the optical mark recognition answer sheets of the test were discovered.
OMR (optical mark recognition) is a form of automated data input.
Multiple choice questions are tested using a standardised optical answer sheet that uses optical mark recognition for detecting answers.
Lindquist's first optical mark recognition scanner used a mimeograph paper-transport mechanism directly coupled to a magnetic drum memory.
Optical mark recognition (OMR)
Optical Mark Recognition (OMR) identifies bubbles filled in by hand or check boxes on printed forms.
Optical mark recognition (OMR) is the scanning of paper to detect the presence or absence of a mark in a predetermined position.
Optical Mark Recognition (OMR)
Students answer multiple choice questions by shading their responses on a standardised optical answer sheet (OAS) that uses optical mark recognition to detect answers.
Optical mark recognition (also called optical mark reading and OMR) is the process of capturing human-marked data from document forms such as surveys and tests.
An automated multi-ride ticket system called MetroTen, based on optical mark recognition rather than magnetic stripe technology, was used on Sydney's government buses from 1987 until 1992.
One of the most familiar applications of optical mark recognition is the use of (HB in Europe) bubble optical answer sheets in multiple choice question examinations.
One technology used are optical mark recognition scanners where voters mark their choice in a voting response location, usually filling a rectangle, circle or oval, or by completing an arrow.
The need for OMR software originated because early optical mark recognition systems were designed to use dedicated scanners and special pre-printed forms with drop-out colors and registration marks.
While mark sense technology dates back to the 1930s and optical mark recognition dates to the 1950s, these technologies were first explored in the context of standardized tests such as college entrance exams.
The term can also be used to describe the tick marks along the length of an optical mark recognition sheet, used to confirm the location of the sheet as it passes through the reader.
Instead, the documents are first scanned by a combined OCR/OMR system (optical character recognition and optical mark recognition,) which attempts to read the documents and process the data electronically.
As a result of the fast-growing use of ITBS tests, he developed the first practical optical mark recognition system as a replacement for the electrical mark sense IBM 805 Test Scoring Machine.
Larger datasets such as statistical surveys are more often created in data entry software, or entered during computer-assisted personal interviewing, by scanning and using optical character recognition and optical mark recognition software, or by direct capture from online questionnaires.
In 2011, The Carter Center, a global peace and health organization founded by former US President Jimmy Carter, cited Smartmatic and the Comelec for the "relatively high public confidence and trust on the use of optical mark recognition technology."
Optical mark reading software allows greater density of information per sheet and greater reliability.
Optical Mark Reading (OMR), a predecessor to image scanners, is a reader designed to digitize responses entered on a paper form.
Optical mark recognition (also called optical mark reading and OMR) is the process of capturing human-marked data from document forms such as surveys and tests.
This covers both assessments delivered on computer, either online or on a local network, and those that are marked with the aid of computers, such as those using Optical Mark Reading (OMR).