6 research outputs found

    Shot Boundary Detection

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    Detekce přechodů ve videu je proces automatického nalezení hranic mezi jednotlivými scénami. Tato práce se zabývá převážně detekcí střihů, postupné přechody jsou ale rovněž uvažovány. Vysvětleny jsou základní pojmy z této oblasti a stručně představeny doposud používané metody. Stěžejní částí je návrh a implementace detektoru přechodů. Ten je založen na kombinaci dvou přístupů. Prvním je porovnávání barevných histogramů sousedních snímků. Druhý, méně tradiční, je založen na sledování výrazných bodů ve videu. Analýza průběhu těchto příznaků probíhá pomocí odhadu jeho derivace. Systém byl otestován na vlastní sadě ručně anotovaných dat. Ukázalo se, že oba příznaky jsou pro detekci přechodů vhodné. Detektor byl schopný nalézt většinu střihů při zachování dobré přesnosti. Prokázala se schopnost detekovat i některé postupné přechody.Shot boundary detection is a process of automatically finding the boundaries between shots in a video. This work primarily deals with detection of hard-cuts, but gradual transitions are also considered. At first, fundamental terms of this field are explained, commonly used methods are shortly described. The main part of this work is design and implementation of system for shot boundary detection based on combination of two methods. The first one is comparison of color histograms for adjacent frames. Second approach is based on visual feature tracking. The analysis of behavior of those features is done by estimating their first derivatives. Proposed system was tested on small, manually annotated set of test data, which showed that both features are suitable for this task. Detector proved its ability to find hard-cuts with good precision. It was also able to detect some gradual transitions.

    Feature based dynamic intra-video indexing

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    A thesis submitted in partial fulfillment for the degree of Doctor of PhilosophyWith the advent of digital imagery and its wide spread application in all vistas of life, it has become an important component in the world of communication. Video content ranging from broadcast news, sports, personal videos, surveillance, movies and entertainment and similar domains is increasing exponentially in quantity and it is becoming a challenge to retrieve content of interest from the corpora. This has led to an increased interest amongst the researchers to investigate concepts of video structure analysis, feature extraction, content annotation, tagging, video indexing, querying and retrieval to fulfil the requirements. However, most of the previous work is confined within specific domain and constrained by the quality, processing and storage capabilities. This thesis presents a novel framework agglomerating the established approaches from feature extraction to browsing in one system of content based video retrieval. The proposed framework significantly fills the gap identified while satisfying the imposed constraints of processing, storage, quality and retrieval times. The output entails a framework, methodology and prototype application to allow the user to efficiently and effectively retrieved content of interest such as age, gender and activity by specifying the relevant query. Experiments have shown plausible results with an average precision and recall of 0.91 and 0.92 respectively for face detection using Haar wavelets based approach. Precision of age ranges from 0.82 to 0.91 and recall from 0.78 to 0.84. The recognition of gender gives better precision with males (0.89) compared to females while recall gives a higher value with females (0.92). Activity of the subject has been detected using Hough transform and classified using Hiddell Markov Model. A comprehensive dataset to support similar studies has also been developed as part of the research process. A Graphical User Interface (GUI) providing a friendly and intuitive interface has been integrated into the developed system to facilitate the retrieval process. The comparison results of the intraclass correlation coefficient (ICC) shows that the performance of the system closely resembles with that of the human annotator. The performance has been optimised for time and error rate

    A robust dissolve detector by support vector machine

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    Deliverable D1.1 State of the art and requirements analysis for hypervideo

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    This deliverable presents a state-of-art and requirements analysis report for hypervideo authored as part of the WP1 of the LinkedTV project. Initially, we present some use-case (viewers) scenarios in the LinkedTV project and through the analysis of the distinctive needs and demands of each scenario we point out the technical requirements from a user-side perspective. Subsequently we study methods for the automatic and semi-automatic decomposition of the audiovisual content in order to effectively support the annotation process. Considering that the multimedia content comprises of different types of information, i.e., visual, textual and audio, we report various methods for the analysis of these three different streams. Finally we present various annotation tools which could integrate the developed analysis results so as to effectively support users (video producers) in the semi-automatic linking of hypervideo content, and based on them we report on the initial progress in building the LinkedTV annotation tool. For each one of the different classes of techniques being discussed in the deliverable we present the evaluation results from the application of one such method of the literature to a dataset well-suited to the needs of the LinkedTV project, and we indicate the future technical requirements that should be addressed in order to achieve higher levels of performance (e.g., in terms of accuracy and time-efficiency), as necessary

    An object-based approach to retrieval of image and video content

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    Promising new directions have been opened up for content-based visual retrieval in recent years. Object-based retrieval which allows users to manipulate video objects as part of their searching and browsing interaction, is one of these. It is the purpose of this thesis to constitute itself as a part of a larger stream of research that investigates visual objects as a possible approach to advancing the use of semantics in content-based visual retrieval. The notion of using objects in video retrieval has been seen as desirable for some years, but only very recently has technology started to allow even very basic object-location functions on video. The main hurdles to greater use of objects in video retrieval are the overhead of object segmentation on large amounts of video and the issue of whether objects can actually be used efficiently for multimedia retrieval. Despite this, there are already some examples of work which supports retrieval based on video objects. This thesis investigates an object-based approach to content-based visual retrieval. The main research contributions of this work are a study of shot boundary detection on compressed domain video where a fast detection approach is proposed and evaluated, and a study on the use of objects in interactive image retrieval. An object-based retrieval framework is developed in order to investigate object-based retrieval on a corpus of natural image and video. This framework contains the entire processing chain required to analyse, index and interactively retrieve images and video via object-to-object matching. The experimental results indicate that object-based searching consistently outperforms image-based search using low-level features. This result goes some way towards validating the approach of allowing users to select objects as a basis for searching video archives when the information need dictates it as appropriate

    Computergestützte Inhaltsanalyse von digitalen Videoarchiven

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    Der Übergang von analogen zu digitalen Videos hat in den letzten Jahren zu großen Veränderungen innerhalb der Filmarchive geführt. Insbesondere durch die Digitalisierung der Filme ergeben sich neue Möglichkeiten für die Archive. Eine Abnutzung oder Alterung der Filmrollen ist ausgeschlossen, so dass die Qualität unverändert erhalten bleibt. Zudem wird ein netzbasierter und somit deutlich einfacherer Zugriff auf die Videos in den Archiven möglich. Zusätzliche Dienste stehen den Archivaren und Anwendern zur Verfügung, die erweiterte Suchmöglichkeiten bereitstellen und die Navigation bei der Wiedergabe erleichtern. Die Suche innerhalb der Videoarchive erfolgt mit Hilfe von Metadaten, die weitere Informationen über die Videos zur Verfügung stellen. Ein großer Teil der Metadaten wird manuell von Archivaren eingegeben, was mit einem großen Zeitaufwand und hohen Kosten verbunden ist. Durch die computergestützte Analyse eines digitalen Videos ist es möglich, den Aufwand bei der Erzeugung von Metadaten für Videoarchive zu reduzieren. Im ersten Teil dieser Dissertation werden neue Verfahren vorgestellt, um wichtige semantische Inhalte der Videos zu erkennen. Insbesondere werden neu entwickelte Algorithmen zur Erkennung von Schnitten, der Analyse der Kamerabewegung, der Segmentierung und Klassifikation von Objekten, der Texterkennung und der Gesichtserkennung vorgestellt. Die automatisch ermittelten semantischen Informationen sind sehr wertvoll, da sie die Arbeit mit digitalen Videoarchiven erleichtern. Die Informationen unterstützen nicht nur die Suche in den Archiven, sondern führen auch zur Entwicklung neuer Anwendungen, die im zweiten Teil der Dissertation vorgestellt werden. Beispielsweise können computergenerierte Zusammenfassungen von Videos erzeugt oder Videos automatisch an die Eigenschaften eines Abspielgerätes angepasst werden. Ein weiterer Schwerpunkt dieser Dissertation liegt in der Analyse historischer Filme. Vier europäische Filmarchive haben eine große Anzahl historischer Videodokumentationen zur Verfügung gestellt, welche Anfang bis Mitte des letzten Jahrhunderts gedreht und in den letzten Jahren digitalisiert wurden. Durch die Lagerung und Abnutzung der Filmrollen über mehrere Jahrzehnte sind viele Videos stark verrauscht und enthalten deutlich sichtbare Bildfehler. Die Bildqualität der historischen Schwarz-Weiß-Filme unterscheidet sich signifikant von der Qualität aktueller Videos, so dass eine verlässliche Analyse mit bestehenden Verfahren häufig nicht möglich ist. Im Rahmen dieser Dissertation werden neue Algorithmen vorgestellt, um eine zuverlässige Erkennung von semantischen Inhalten auch in historischen Videos zu ermöglichen
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