594 research outputs found

    A detection-based pattern recognition framework and its applications

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    The objective of this dissertation is to present a detection-based pattern recognition framework and demonstrate its applications in automatic speech recognition and broadcast news video story segmentation. Inspired by the studies of modern cognitive psychology and real-world pattern recognition systems, a detection-based pattern recognition framework is proposed to provide an alternative solution for some complicated pattern recognition problems. The primitive features are first detected and the task-specific knowledge hierarchy is constructed level by level; then a variety of heterogeneous information sources are combined together and the high-level context is incorporated as additional information at certain stages. A detection-based framework is a â divide-and-conquerâ design paradigm for pattern recognition problems, which will decompose a conceptually difficult problem into many elementary sub-problems that can be handled directly and reliably. Some information fusion strategies will be employed to integrate the evidence from a lower level to form the evidence at a higher level. Such a fusion procedure continues until reaching the top level. Generally, a detection-based framework has many advantages: (1) more flexibility in both detector design and fusion strategies, as these two parts can be optimized separately; (2) parallel and distributed computational components in primitive feature detection. In such a component-based framework, any primitive component can be replaced by a new one while other components remain unchanged; (3) incremental information integration; (4) high level context information as additional information sources, which can be combined with bottom-up processing at any stage. This dissertation presents the basic principles, criteria, and techniques for detector design and hypothesis verification based on the statistical detection and decision theory. In addition, evidence fusion strategies were investigated in this dissertation. Several novel detection algorithms and evidence fusion methods were proposed and their effectiveness was justified in automatic speech recognition and broadcast news video segmentation system. We believe such a detection-based framework can be employed in more applications in the future.Ph.D.Committee Chair: Lee, Chin-Hui; Committee Member: Clements, Mark; Committee Member: Ghovanloo, Maysam; Committee Member: Romberg, Justin; Committee Member: Yuan, Min

    Iconic Indexing for Video Search

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    Submitted for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy, Queen Mary, University of London

    Digital Image Access & Retrieval

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    The 33th Annual Clinic on Library Applications of Data Processing, held at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign in March of 1996, addressed the theme of "Digital Image Access & Retrieval." The papers from this conference cover a wide range of topics concerning digital imaging technology for visual resource collections. Papers covered three general areas: (1) systems, planning, and implementation; (2) automatic and semi-automatic indexing; and (3) preservation with the bulk of the conference focusing on indexing and retrieval.published or submitted for publicatio

    Segmentation sémantique des contenus audio-visuels

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    Dans ce travail, nous avons mis au point une méthode de segmentation des contenus audiovisuels applicable aux appareils de stockage domestiques pour cela nous avons expérimenté un système distribué pour l’analyse du contenu composé de modules individuels d’analyse : les Service Unit. L’un d’entre eux a été dédié à la caractérisation des éléments hors contenu, i.e. les publicités, et offre de bonnes performances. Parallèlement, nous avons testé différents détecteurs de changement de plans afin de retenir le meilleur d’entre eux pour la suite. Puis, nous avons proposé une étude des règles de production des films, i.e. grammaire de films, qui a permis de définir les séquences de Parallel Shot. Nous avons, ainsi, testé quatre méthodes de regroupement basées similarité afin de retenir la meilleure d’entre elles pour la suite. Finalement, nous avons recherché différentes méthodes de détection des frontières de scènes et avons obtenu les meilleurs résultats en combinant une méthode basée couleur avec un critère de longueur de plan. Ce dernier offre des performances justifiant son intégration dans les appareils de stockage grand public.In this work we elaborated a method for semantic segmentation of audiovisual content applicable for consumer electronics storage devices. For the specific solution we researched first a service-oriented distributed multimedia content analysis framework composed of individual content analysis modules, i.e. Service Units. One of the latter was dedicated to identify non-content related inserts, i.e. commercials blocks, which reached high performance results. In a subsequent step we researched and benchmarked various Shot Boundary Detectors and implement the best performing one as Service Unit. Here after, our study of production rules, i.e. film grammar, provided insights of Parallel Shot sequences, i.e. Cross-Cuttings and Shot-Reverse-Shots. We researched and benchmarked four similarity-based clustering methods, two colour- and two feature-point-based ones, in order to retain the best one for our final solution. Finally, we researched several audiovisual Scene Boundary Detector methods and achieved best results combining a colour-based method with a shot length based criteria. This Scene Boundary Detector identified semantic scene boundaries with a robustness of 66% for movies and 80% for series, which proofed to be sufficient for our envisioned application Advanced Content Navigation

    Computational Intelligence and Human- Computer Interaction: Modern Methods and Applications

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    The present book contains all of the articles that were accepted and published in the Special Issue of MDPI’s journal Mathematics titled "Computational Intelligence and Human–Computer Interaction: Modern Methods and Applications". This Special Issue covered a wide range of topics connected to the theory and application of different computational intelligence techniques to the domain of human–computer interaction, such as automatic speech recognition, speech processing and analysis, virtual reality, emotion-aware applications, digital storytelling, natural language processing, smart cars and devices, and online learning. We hope that this book will be interesting and useful for those working in various areas of artificial intelligence, human–computer interaction, and software engineering as well as for those who are interested in how these domains are connected in real-life situations

    Bridging semantic gap: learning and integrating semantics for content-based retrieval

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    Digital cameras have entered ordinary homes and produced^incredibly large number of photos. As a typical example of broad image domain, unconstrained consumer photos vary significantly. Unlike professional or domain-specific images, the objects in the photos are ill-posed, occluded, and cluttered with poor lighting, focus, and exposure. Content-based image retrieval research has yet to bridge the semantic gap between computable low-level information and high-level user interpretation. In this thesis, we address the issue of semantic gap with a structured learning framework to allow modular extraction of visual semantics. Semantic image regions (e.g. face, building, sky etc) are learned statistically, detected directly from image without segmentation, reconciled across multiple scales, and aggregated spatially to form compact semantic index. To circumvent the ambiguity and subjectivity in a query, a new query method that allows spatial arrangement of visual semantics is proposed. A query is represented as a disjunctive normal form of visual query terms and processed using fuzzy set operators. A drawback of supervised learning is the manual labeling of regions as training samples. In this thesis, a new learning framework to discover local semantic patterns and to generate their samples for training with minimal human intervention has been developed. The discovered patterns can be visualized and used in semantic indexing. In addition, three new class-based indexing schemes are explored. The winnertake- all scheme supports class-based image retrieval. The class relative scheme and the local classification scheme compute inter-class memberships and local class patterns as indexes for similarity matching respectively. A Bayesian formulation is proposed to unify local and global indexes in image comparison and ranking that resulted in superior image retrieval performance over those of single indexes. Query-by-example experiments on 2400 consumer photos with 16 semantic queries show that the proposed approaches have significantly better (18% to 55%) average precisions than a high-dimension feature fusion approach. The thesis has paved two promising research directions, namely the semantics design approach and the semantics discovery approach. They form elegant dual frameworks that exploits pattern classifiers in learning and integrating local and global image semantics
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