4,516 research outputs found

    From media crossing to media mining

    Get PDF
    This paper reviews how the concept of Media Crossing has contributed to the advancement of the application domain of information access and explores directions for a future research agenda. These will include themes that could help to broaden the scope and to incorporate the concept of medium-crossing in a more general approach that not only uses combinations of medium-specific processing, but that also exploits more abstract medium-independent representations, partly based on the foundational work on statistical language models for information retrieval. Three examples of successful applications of media crossing will be presented, with a focus on the aspects that could be considered a first step towards a generalized form of media mining

    Measuring concept similarities in multimedia ontologies: analysis and evaluations

    Get PDF
    The recent development of large-scale multimedia concept ontologies has provided a new momentum for research in the semantic analysis of multimedia repositories. Different methods for generic concept detection have been extensively studied, but the question of how to exploit the structure of a multimedia ontology and existing inter-concept relations has not received similar attention. In this paper, we present a clustering-based method for modeling semantic concepts on low-level feature spaces and study the evaluation of the quality of such models with entropy-based methods. We cover a variety of methods for assessing the similarity of different concepts in a multimedia ontology. We study three ontologies and apply the proposed techniques in experiments involving the visual and semantic similarities, manual annotation of video, and concept detection. The results show that modeling inter-concept relations can provide a promising resource for many different application areas in semantic multimedia processing

    An empirical study of inter-concept similarities in multimedia ontologies

    Get PDF
    Generic concept detection has been a widely studied topic in recent research on multimedia analysis and retrieval, but the issue of how to exploit the structure of a multimedia ontology as well as different inter-concept relations, has not received similar attention. In this paper, we present results from our empirical analysis of different types of similarity among semantic concepts in two multimedia ontologies, LSCOM-Lite and CDVP-206. The results show promise that the proposed methods may be helpful in providing insight into the existing inter-concept relations within an ontology and selecting the most facilitating set of concepts and hierarchical relations. Such an analysis as this can be utilized in various tasks such as building more reliable concept detectors and designing large-scale ontologies

    Document Based Clustering For Detecting Events in Microblogging Websites

    Get PDF
    Social media has a great in?uence in our daily lives. People share their opinions, stories, news, and broadcast events using social media. This results in great amounts of information in social media. It is cumbersome to identify and organize the interesting events with this massive volumes of data, typically browsing, searching, monitoring events becomes more and more challenging. A lot of work has been done in the area of topic detection and tracking (TDT). Most of these methods are based on single-modality (e.g., text, images) information or multi-modality information. In the single-modality analysis, many existing methods adopt visual information (e.g., images and videos) or textual information (e.g., names, time references, locations, title, tags, and description) in isolation to model event data for event detection and tracking. This problem can be resolved by a novel multi-model social event tracking and an evolutionary framework not only effectively capturing the events, but also generates the summary of these events over time. We proposed a novel method works with mmETM, which can effectively model the social documents, which includes the long text along with the images. It learns the similarities between the textual and visual modalities to separate the visual and non-visual representative topics. To incorporate our method to social tracking, we adopted an incremental learning technique represented as mmETM, which gives informative textual and visual topics of event in social media with respect to the time. To validate our work, we used a sample data set and conducted various experiments on it. Both subjective and quantitative assessments show that the proposed mmETM technique performs positively against a few best state-of-the art techniques

    CHORUS Deliverable 2.1: State of the Art on Multimedia Search Engines

    Get PDF
    Based on the information provided by European projects and national initiatives related to multimedia search as well as domains experts that participated in the CHORUS Think-thanks and workshops, this document reports on the state of the art related to multimedia content search from, a technical, and socio-economic perspective. The technical perspective includes an up to date view on content based indexing and retrieval technologies, multimedia search in the context of mobile devices and peer-to-peer networks, and an overview of current evaluation and benchmark inititiatives to measure the performance of multimedia search engines. From a socio-economic perspective we inventorize the impact and legal consequences of these technical advances and point out future directions of research
    corecore