2,021 research outputs found
Deep Multimodal Speaker Naming
Automatic speaker naming is the problem of localizing as well as identifying
each speaking character in a TV/movie/live show video. This is a challenging
problem mainly attributes to its multimodal nature, namely face cue alone is
insufficient to achieve good performance. Previous multimodal approaches to
this problem usually process the data of different modalities individually and
merge them using handcrafted heuristics. Such approaches work well for simple
scenes, but fail to achieve high performance for speakers with large appearance
variations. In this paper, we propose a novel convolutional neural networks
(CNN) based learning framework to automatically learn the fusion function of
both face and audio cues. We show that without using face tracking, facial
landmark localization or subtitle/transcript, our system with robust multimodal
feature extraction is able to achieve state-of-the-art speaker naming
performance evaluated on two diverse TV series. The dataset and implementation
of our algorithm are publicly available online
Audio-coupled video content understanding of unconstrained video sequences
Unconstrained video understanding is a difficult task. The main aim of this thesis is to
recognise the nature of objects, activities and environment in a given video clip using
both audio and video information. Traditionally, audio and video information has not
been applied together for solving such complex task, and for the first time we propose,
develop, implement and test a new framework of multi-modal (audio and video) data
analysis for context understanding and labelling of unconstrained videos.
The framework relies on feature selection techniques and introduces a novel algorithm
(PCFS) that is faster than the well-established SFFS algorithm. We use the framework for
studying the benefits of combining audio and video information in a number of different
problems. We begin by developing two independent content recognition modules. The
first one is based on image sequence analysis alone, and uses a range of colour, shape,
texture and statistical features from image regions with a trained classifier to recognise
the identity of objects, activities and environment present. The second module uses audio
information only, and recognises activities and environment. Both of these approaches
are preceded by detailed pre-processing to ensure that correct video segments containing
both audio and video content are present, and that the developed system can be made
robust to changes in camera movement, illumination, random object behaviour etc. For
both audio and video analysis, we use a hierarchical approach of multi-stage
classification such that difficult classification tasks can be decomposed into simpler and
smaller tasks.
When combining both modalities, we compare fusion techniques at different levels of
integration and propose a novel algorithm that combines advantages of both feature and
decision-level fusion. The analysis is evaluated on a large amount of test data comprising
unconstrained videos collected for this work. We finally, propose a decision correction
algorithm which shows that further steps towards combining multi-modal classification
information effectively with semantic knowledge generates the best possible results
Saliency-guided video classification via adaptively weighted learning
Video classification is productive in many practical applications, and the
recent deep learning has greatly improved its accuracy. However, existing works
often model video frames indiscriminately, but from the view of motion, video
frames can be decomposed into salient and non-salient areas naturally. Salient
and non-salient areas should be modeled with different networks, for the former
present both appearance and motion information, and the latter present static
background information. To address this problem, in this paper, video saliency
is predicted by optical flow without supervision firstly. Then two streams of
3D CNN are trained individually for raw frames and optical flow on salient
areas, and another 2D CNN is trained for raw frames on non-salient areas. For
the reason that these three streams play different roles for each class, the
weights of each stream are adaptively learned for each class. Experimental
results show that saliency-guided modeling and adaptively weighted learning can
reinforce each other, and we achieve the state-of-the-art results.Comment: 6 pages, 1 figure, accepted by ICME 201
Finding Time Together:Detection and Classification of Focused Interaction in Egocentric Video
Focused interaction occurs when co-present individuals, having mutual focus of attention, interact by establishing face-to-face engagement and direct conversation. Face-to-face engagement is often not maintained throughout the entirety of a focused interaction. In this paper, we present an online method for automatic classification of unconstrained egocentric (first-person perspective) videos into segments having no focused interaction, focused interaction when the camera wearer is stationary and focused interaction when the camera wearer is moving. We extract features from both audio and video data streams and perform temporal segmentation by using support vector machines with linear and non-linear kernels. We provide empirical evidence that fusion of visual face track scores, camera motion profile and audio voice activity scores is an effective combination for focused interaction classification
AXES at TRECVID 2012: KIS, INS, and MED
The AXES project participated in the interactive instance search task (INS), the known-item search task (KIS), and the multimedia event detection task (MED) for TRECVid 2012. As in our TRECVid 2011 system, we used nearly identical search systems and user interfaces for both INS and KIS. Our interactive INS and KIS systems focused this year on using classifiers trained at query time with positive examples collected from external search engines. Participants in our KIS experiments were media professionals from the BBC; our INS experiments were carried out by students and researchers at Dublin City University. We performed comparatively well in both experiments. Our best KIS run found 13 of the 25 topics, and our best INS runs outperformed all other submitted runs in terms of P@100. For MED, the system presented was based on a minimal number of low-level descriptors, which we chose to be as large as computationally feasible. These descriptors are aggregated to produce high-dimensional video-level signatures, which are used to train a set of linear classifiers. Our MED system achieved the second-best score of all submitted runs in the main track, and best score in the ad-hoc track, suggesting that a simple system based on state-of-the-art low-level descriptors can give relatively high performance. This paper describes in detail our KIS, INS, and MED systems and the results and findings of our experiments
- …