697 research outputs found
Sparse Transfer Learning for Interactive Video Search Reranking
Visual reranking is effective to improve the performance of the text-based
video search. However, existing reranking algorithms can only achieve limited
improvement because of the well-known semantic gap between low level visual
features and high level semantic concepts. In this paper, we adopt interactive
video search reranking to bridge the semantic gap by introducing user's
labeling effort. We propose a novel dimension reduction tool, termed sparse
transfer learning (STL), to effectively and efficiently encode user's labeling
information. STL is particularly designed for interactive video search
reranking. Technically, it a) considers the pair-wise discriminative
information to maximally separate labeled query relevant samples from labeled
query irrelevant ones, b) achieves a sparse representation for the subspace to
encodes user's intention by applying the elastic net penalty, and c) propagates
user's labeling information from labeled samples to unlabeled samples by using
the data distribution knowledge. We conducted extensive experiments on the
TRECVID 2005, 2006 and 2007 benchmark datasets and compared STL with popular
dimension reduction algorithms. We report superior performance by using the
proposed STL based interactive video search reranking.Comment: 17 page
Strategies for Searching Video Content with Text Queries or Video Examples
The large number of user-generated videos uploaded on to the Internet
everyday has led to many commercial video search engines, which mainly rely on
text metadata for search. However, metadata is often lacking for user-generated
videos, thus these videos are unsearchable by current search engines.
Therefore, content-based video retrieval (CBVR) tackles this metadata-scarcity
problem by directly analyzing the visual and audio streams of each video. CBVR
encompasses multiple research topics, including low-level feature design,
feature fusion, semantic detector training and video search/reranking. We
present novel strategies in these topics to enhance CBVR in both accuracy and
speed under different query inputs, including pure textual queries and query by
video examples. Our proposed strategies have been incorporated into our
submission for the TRECVID 2014 Multimedia Event Detection evaluation, where
our system outperformed other submissions in both text queries and video
example queries, thus demonstrating the effectiveness of our proposed
approaches
Neural reranking for dependency parsing: An evaluation
Recent work has shown that neural rerankers can improve results for dependency parsing over the top k trees produced by a base parser. However, all neural rerankers so far have been evaluated on English and Chinese only, both languages with a configurational word order and poor morphology. In the paper, we re-assess the potential of successful neural reranking models from the literature on English and on two morphologically rich(er) languages, German and Czech. In addition, we introduce a new variation of a discriminative reranker based on graph convolutional networks (GCNs). We show that the GCN not
only outperforms previous models on English but is the only model that is able to improve results over the baselines on German and Czech. We explain the differences in reranking performance based on an analysis of a) the gold tree ratio and b) the variety in the k-best lists
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