13,956 research outputs found
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
Zero-Shot Event Detection by Multimodal Distributional Semantic Embedding of Videos
We propose a new zero-shot Event Detection method by Multi-modal
Distributional Semantic embedding of videos. Our model embeds object and action
concepts as well as other available modalities from videos into a
distributional semantic space. To our knowledge, this is the first Zero-Shot
event detection model that is built on top of distributional semantics and
extends it in the following directions: (a) semantic embedding of multimodal
information in videos (with focus on the visual modalities), (b) automatically
determining relevance of concepts/attributes to a free text query, which could
be useful for other applications, and (c) retrieving videos by free text event
query (e.g., "changing a vehicle tire") based on their content. We embed videos
into a distributional semantic space and then measure the similarity between
videos and the event query in a free text form. We validated our method on the
large TRECVID MED (Multimedia Event Detection) challenge. Using only the event
title as a query, our method outperformed the state-of-the-art that uses big
descriptions from 12.6% to 13.5% with MAP metric and 0.73 to 0.83 with ROC-AUC
metric. It is also an order of magnitude faster.Comment: To appear in AAAI 201
Multimodal Classification of Urban Micro-Events
In this paper we seek methods to effectively detect urban micro-events. Urban
micro-events are events which occur in cities, have limited geographical
coverage and typically affect only a small group of citizens. Because of their
scale these are difficult to identify in most data sources. However, by using
citizen sensing to gather data, detecting them becomes feasible. The data
gathered by citizen sensing is often multimodal and, as a consequence, the
information required to detect urban micro-events is distributed over multiple
modalities. This makes it essential to have a classifier capable of combining
them. In this paper we explore several methods of creating such a classifier,
including early, late, hybrid fusion and representation learning using
multimodal graphs. We evaluate performance on a real world dataset obtained
from a live citizen reporting system. We show that a multimodal approach yields
higher performance than unimodal alternatives. Furthermore, we demonstrate that
our hybrid combination of early and late fusion with multimodal embeddings
performs best in classification of urban micro-events
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