2,060 research outputs found

    Measuring concept similarities in multimedia ontologies: analysis and evaluations

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    The recent development of large-scale multimedia concept ontologies has provided a new momentum for research in the semantic analysis of multimedia repositories. Different methods for generic concept detection have been extensively studied, but the question of how to exploit the structure of a multimedia ontology and existing inter-concept relations has not received similar attention. In this paper, we present a clustering-based method for modeling semantic concepts on low-level feature spaces and study the evaluation of the quality of such models with entropy-based methods. We cover a variety of methods for assessing the similarity of different concepts in a multimedia ontology. We study three ontologies and apply the proposed techniques in experiments involving the visual and semantic similarities, manual annotation of video, and concept detection. The results show that modeling inter-concept relations can provide a promising resource for many different application areas in semantic multimedia processing

    An audio-based sports video segmentation and event detection algorithm

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    In this paper, we present an audio-based event detection algorithm shown to be effective when applied to Soccer video. The main benefit of this approach is the ability to recognise patterns that display high levels of crowd response correlated to key events. The soundtrack from a Soccer sequence is first parameterised using Mel-frequency Cepstral coefficients. It is then segmented into homogenous components using a windowing algorithm with a decision process based on Bayesian model selection. This decision process eliminated the need for defining a heuristic set of rules for segmentation. Each audio segment is then labelled using a series of Hidden Markov model (HMM) classifiers, each a representation of one of 6 predefined semantic content classes found in Soccer video. Exciting events are identified as those segments belonging to a crowd cheering class. Experimentation indicated that the algorithm was more effective for classifying crowd response when compared to traditional model-based segmentation and classification techniques

    Short user-generated videos classification using accompanied audio categories

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    This paper investigates the classification of short user-generated videos (UGVs) using the accompanied audio data since short UGVs accounts for a great proportion of the Internet UGVs and many short UGVs are accompanied by singlecategory soundtracks. We define seven types of UGVs corresponding to seven audio categories respectively. We also investigate three modeling approaches for audio feature representation, namely, single Gaussian (1G), Gaussian mixture (GMM) and Bag-of-Audio-Word (BoAW) models. Then using Support Vector Machine (SVM) with three different distance measurements corresponding to three feature representations, classifiers are trained to categorize the UGVs. The accompanying evaluation results show that these approaches are effective for categorizing the short UGVs based on their audio track. Experimental results show that a GMM representation with approximated Bhattacharyya distance (ABD) measurement produces the best performance, and BoAW representation with chi-square kernel also reports comparable results

    Multimedia Retrieval

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    Segmentation of Football Video Broadcast

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    In this paper a novel segmentation system for football player detection in broadcasted video is presented. Proposed detection system is a complex solution incorporating a dominant color based segmentation technique of a football playfield, a 3D playfield modeling algorithm based on Hough transform and a dedicated algorithm for player tracking, player detection system based on the combination of Histogram of Oriented Gradients (HOG) descriptors with Principal Component Analysis (PCA) and linear Support Vector Machine (SVM) classification. For the shot classification the several classification technique SVM, artificial neural network and Linear Discriminant Analysis (LDA) are used. Evaluation of the system is carried out using HD (1280×720) resolution test material. Additionally, performance of the proposed system is tested with different lighting conditions (including non-uniform pith lightning and multiple player shadows) and various camera positions. Experimental results presented in this paper show that combination of these techniques seems to be a promising solution for locating and segmenting objects in a broadcasted video
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