10 research outputs found

    Social Event Detection at MediaEval 2013: Challenges, Datasets, and Evaluation

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    Reuter T, Papadopoulos S, Petkos G, et al. Social Event Detection at MediaEval 2013: Challenges, Datasets, and Evaluation. In: Proceedings of the MediaEval 2013 Multimedia Benchmark Workshop Barcelona, Spain, October 18-19, 2013. 2013.In this paper, we provide an overview of the Social Event Detection (SED) task that is part of the MediaEval Benchmark for Multimedia Evaluation 2013. This task requires participants to discover social events and organize the related media items in event-specic clusters within a collection of Web multimedia. Social events are events that are planned by people, attended by people and for which the social multimedia are also captured by people. We describe the challenges, datasets, and the evaluation methodology

    ReSEED: Social Event dEtection Dataset

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    Reuter T, Papadopoulos S, Mezaris V, Cimiano P. ReSEED: Social Event dEtection Dataset. In: MMSys '14. Proceedings of the 5th ACM Multimedia Systems Conference . New York: ACM; 2014: 35-40.Nowadays, digital cameras are very popular among people and quite every mobile phone has a build-in camera. Social events have a prominent role in people’s life. Thus, people take pictures of events they take part in and more and more of them upload these to well-known online photo community sites like Flickr. The number of pictures uploaded to these sites is still proliferating and there is a great interest in automatizing the process of event clustering so that every incoming (picture) document can be assigned to the corresponding event without the need of human interaction. These social events are defined as events that are planned by people, attended by people and for which the social multimedia are also captured by people. There is an urgent need to develop algorithms which are capable of grouping media by the social events they depict or are related to. In order to train, test, and evaluate such algorithms and frameworks, we present a dataset that consists of about 430,000 photos from Flickr together with the underlying ground truth consisting of about 21,000 social events. All the photos are accompanied by their textual metadata. The ground truth for the event groupings has been derived from event calendars on the Web that have been created collaboratively by people. The dataset has been used in the Social Event Detection (SED) task that was part of the MediaEval Benchmark for Multimedia Evaluation 2013. This task required participants to discover social events and organize the related media items in event-specific clusters within a collection of Web multimedia documents. In this paper we describe how the dataset has been collected and the creation of the ground truth together with a proposed evaluation methodology and a brief description of the corresponding task challenge as applied in the context of the Social Event Detection task

    Deliverable D7.3 LinkedTV Dissemination and Standardisation Report v1

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    This deliverable presents the LinkedTV dissemination and standardisation report for the first 18 months of the project

    Deliverable D9.1.1 Annual Project Scientific Report

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    This document comprises the publishable excerpts of the first periodic scientific report of LinkedTV. It includes a short summary, a progress report as well as a management report for the first reporting period

    Deliverable D9.3 Final Project Report

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    This document comprises the final report of LinkedTV. It includes a publishable summary, a plan for use and dissemination of foreground and a report covering the wider societal implications of the project in the form of a questionnaire

    Event identification in social media using classification-clustering framework

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    In recent years, there has been increased interest in real-world event detection using publicly accessible data made available through Internet technology such as Twitter, Facebook and YouTube. In these highly interactive systems the general public are able to post real-time reactions to “real world" events - thereby acting as social sensors of terrestrial activity. Automatically detecting and categorizing events, particularly smallscale incidents, using streamed data is a non-trivial task, due to the heterogeneity, the scalability and the varied quality of the data as well as the presence of noise and irrelevant information. However, it would be of high value to public safety organisations such as local police, who need to respond accordingly. To address these challenges we present an end-to-end integrated event detection framework which comprises five main components: data collection, pre-processing, classification, online clustering and summarization. The integration between classification and clustering enables events to be detected, especially “disruptive events" - incidents that threaten social safety and security, or that could disrupt social order. We present an evaluation of the effectiveness of detecting events using a variety of features derived from Twitter posts, namely: temporal, spatial and textual content. We evaluate our framework on large-scale, realworld datasets from Twitter and Flickr. Furthermore, we apply our event detection system to a large corpus of tweets posted during the August 2011 riots in England. We show that our system can perform as well as terrestrial sources, such as police reports, traditional surveillance, and emergency calls, even better than local police intelligence in most cases. The framework developed in this thesis provides a scalable, online solution, to handle the high volume of social media documents in different languages including English, Arabic, Eastern languages such as Chinese, and many Latin languages. Moreover, event detection is a concept that is crucial to the assurance of public safety surrounding real-world events. Decision makers use information from a range of terrestrial and online sources to help inform decisions that enable them to develop policies and react appropriately to events as they unfold. Due to the heterogeneity and scale of the data and the fact that some messages are more salient than others for the purposes of understanding any risk to human safety and managing any disruption caused by events, automatic summarization of event-related microblogs is a non-trivial and important problem. In this thesis we tackle the task of automatic summarization of Twitter posts, and present three methods that produce summaries by selecting the most representative posts from real-world tweet-event clusters. To evaluate our approaches, we compare them to the state-of-the-art summarization systems and human generated summaries. Our results show that our proposed methods outperform all the other summarization systems for English and non-English corpora

    Deliverable D1.1 State of the art and requirements analysis for hypervideo

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    This deliverable presents a state-of-art and requirements analysis report for hypervideo authored as part of the WP1 of the LinkedTV project. Initially, we present some use-case (viewers) scenarios in the LinkedTV project and through the analysis of the distinctive needs and demands of each scenario we point out the technical requirements from a user-side perspective. Subsequently we study methods for the automatic and semi-automatic decomposition of the audiovisual content in order to effectively support the annotation process. Considering that the multimedia content comprises of different types of information, i.e., visual, textual and audio, we report various methods for the analysis of these three different streams. Finally we present various annotation tools which could integrate the developed analysis results so as to effectively support users (video producers) in the semi-automatic linking of hypervideo content, and based on them we report on the initial progress in building the LinkedTV annotation tool. For each one of the different classes of techniques being discussed in the deliverable we present the evaluation results from the application of one such method of the literature to a dataset well-suited to the needs of the LinkedTV project, and we indicate the future technical requirements that should be addressed in order to achieve higher levels of performance (e.g., in terms of accuracy and time-efficiency), as necessary
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