10,371 research outputs found
Terminology mining in social media
The highly variable and dynamic word usage in social media presents serious challenges for both research and those commercial applications that are geared towards blogs or other user-generated non-editorial texts. This paper discusses and exempliļ¬es a terminology mining approach for dealing with the productive character of the textual environment in social media. We explore the challenges of practically acquiring new terminology, and of modeling similarity and relatedness of terms from observing realistic amounts of data. We also discuss semantic evolution and density, and investigate novel measures for characterizing the preconditions for terminology mining
Digital Image Access & Retrieval
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
Multi modal multi-semantic image retrieval
PhDThe rapid growth in the volume of visual information, e.g. image, and video can
overwhelm usersā ability to find and access the specific visual information of interest
to them. In recent years, ontology knowledge-based (KB) image information retrieval
techniques have been adopted into in order to attempt to extract knowledge from these
images, enhancing the retrieval performance. A KB framework is presented to
promote semi-automatic annotation and semantic image retrieval using multimodal
cues (visual features and text captions). In addition, a hierarchical structure for the KB
allows metadata to be shared that supports multi-semantics (polysemy) for concepts.
The framework builds up an effective knowledge base pertaining to a domain specific
image collection, e.g. sports, and is able to disambiguate and assign high level
semantics to āunannotatedā images.
Local feature analysis of visual content, namely using Scale Invariant Feature
Transform (SIFT) descriptors, have been deployed in the āBag of Visual Wordsā
model (BVW) as an effective method to represent visual content information and to
enhance its classification and retrieval. Local features are more useful than global
features, e.g. colour, shape or texture, as they are invariant to image scale, orientation
and camera angle. An innovative approach is proposed for the representation,
annotation and retrieval of visual content using a hybrid technique based upon the use
of an unstructured visual word and upon a (structured) hierarchical ontology KB
model. The structural model facilitates the disambiguation of unstructured visual
words and a more effective classification of visual content, compared to a vector
space model, through exploiting local conceptual structures and their relationships.
The key contributions of this framework in using local features for image
representation include: first, a method to generate visual words using the semantic
local adaptive clustering (SLAC) algorithm which takes term weight and spatial
locations of keypoints into account. Consequently, the semantic information is
preserved. Second a technique is used to detect the domain specific ānon-informative
visual wordsā which are ineffective at representing the content of visual data and
degrade its categorisation ability. Third, a method to combine an ontology model with
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a visual word model to resolve synonym (visual heterogeneity) and polysemy
problems, is proposed. The experimental results show that this approach can discover
semantically meaningful visual content descriptions and recognise specific events,
e.g., sports events, depicted in images efficiently.
Since discovering the semantics of an image is an extremely challenging problem, one
promising approach to enhance visual content interpretation is to use any associated
textual information that accompanies an image, as a cue to predict the meaning of an
image, by transforming this textual information into a structured annotation for an
image e.g. using XML, RDF, OWL or MPEG-7. Although, text and image are distinct
types of information representation and modality, there are some strong, invariant,
implicit, connections between images and any accompanying text information.
Semantic analysis of image captions can be used by image retrieval systems to
retrieve selected images more precisely. To do this, a Natural Language Processing
(NLP) is exploited firstly in order to extract concepts from image captions. Next, an
ontology-based knowledge model is deployed in order to resolve natural language
ambiguities. To deal with the accompanying text information, two methods to extract
knowledge from textual information have been proposed. First, metadata can be
extracted automatically from text captions and restructured with respect to a semantic
model. Second, the use of LSI in relation to a domain-specific ontology-based
knowledge model enables the combined framework to tolerate ambiguities and
variations (incompleteness) of metadata. The use of the ontology-based knowledge
model allows the system to find indirectly relevant concepts in image captions and
thus leverage these to represent the semantics of images at a higher level.
Experimental results show that the proposed framework significantly enhances image
retrieval and leads to narrowing of the semantic gap between lower level machinederived
and higher level human-understandable conceptualisation
Structural Regularities in Text-based Entity Vector Spaces
Entity retrieval is the task of finding entities such as people or products
in response to a query, based solely on the textual documents they are
associated with. Recent semantic entity retrieval algorithms represent queries
and experts in finite-dimensional vector spaces, where both are constructed
from text sequences.
We investigate entity vector spaces and the degree to which they capture
structural regularities. Such vector spaces are constructed in an unsupervised
manner without explicit information about structural aspects. For concreteness,
we address these questions for a specific type of entity: experts in the
context of expert finding. We discover how clusterings of experts correspond to
committees in organizations, the ability of expert representations to encode
the co-author graph, and the degree to which they encode academic rank. We
compare latent, continuous representations created using methods based on
distributional semantics (LSI), topic models (LDA) and neural networks
(word2vec, doc2vec, SERT). Vector spaces created using neural methods, such as
doc2vec and SERT, systematically perform better at clustering than LSI, LDA and
word2vec. When it comes to encoding entity relations, SERT performs best.Comment: ICTIR2017. Proceedings of the 3rd ACM International Conference on the
Theory of Information Retrieval. 201
VITALAS at TRECVID-2008
In this paper, we present our experiments in TRECVID 2008 about High-Level feature extraction task. This is the first year for our participation in TRECVID, our system adopts some popular approaches that other workgroups proposed before. We proposed 2 advanced low-level features NEW Gabor texture descriptor and the Compact-SIFT Codeword histogram. Our system applied well-known LIBSVM to train the SVM classifier for the basic classifier. In fusion step, some methods were employed such as the Voting, SVM-base, HCRF and Bootstrap Average AdaBoost(BAAB)
Semantic multimedia analysis using knowledge and context
PhDThe difficulty of semantic multimedia analysis can be attributed to the
extended diversity in form and appearance exhibited by the majority of
semantic concepts and the difficulty to express them using a finite number
of patterns. In meeting this challenge there has been a scientific debate
on whether the problem should be addressed from the perspective of using
overwhelming amounts of training data to capture all possible instantiations
of a concept, or from the perspective of using explicit knowledge about
the conceptsā relations to infer their presence. In this thesis we address
three problems of pattern recognition and propose solutions that combine
the knowledge extracted implicitly from training data with the knowledge
provided explicitly in structured form. First, we propose a BNs modeling
approach that defines a conceptual space where both domain related evi-
dence and evidence derived from content analysis can be jointly considered
to support or disprove a hypothesis. The use of this space leads to sig-
nificant gains in performance compared to analysis methods that can not
handle combined knowledge. Then, we present an unsupervised method
that exploits the collective nature of social media to automatically obtain
large amounts of annotated image regions. By proving that the quality of
the obtained samples can be almost as good as manually annotated images
when working with large datasets, we significantly contribute towards scal-
able object detection. Finally, we introduce a method that treats images,
visual features and tags as the three observable variables of an aspect model
and extracts a set of latent topics that incorporates the semantics of both
visual and tag information space. By showing that the cross-modal depen-
dencies of tagged images can be exploited to increase the semantic capacity
of the resulting space, we advocate the use of all existing information facets
in the semantic analysis of social media
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