53,192 research outputs found
Bridging the Semantic Gap in Multimedia Information Retrieval: Top-down and Bottom-up approaches
Semantic representation of multimedia information is vital for enabling the kind of multimedia search capabilities that professional searchers require. Manual annotation is often not possible because of the shear scale of the multimedia information that needs indexing. This paper explores the ways in which we are using both top-down, ontologically driven approaches and bottom-up, automatic-annotation approaches to provide retrieval facilities to users. We also discuss many of the current techniques that we are investigating to combine these top-down and bottom-up approaches
CHORUS Deliverable 2.1: State of the Art on Multimedia Search Engines
Based on the information provided by European projects and national initiatives related to multimedia search as well as domains experts that participated in the CHORUS Think-thanks and workshops, this document reports on the state of the art related to multimedia content search from, a technical, and socio-economic perspective.
The technical perspective includes an up to date view on content based indexing and retrieval technologies, multimedia search in the context of mobile devices and peer-to-peer networks, and an overview of current evaluation and benchmark inititiatives to measure the performance of multimedia search engines.
From a socio-economic perspective we inventorize the impact and legal consequences of these technical advances and point out future directions of research
Image Labeling on a Network: Using Social-Network Metadata for Image Classification
Large-scale image retrieval benchmarks invariably consist of images from the
Web. Many of these benchmarks are derived from online photo sharing networks,
like Flickr, which in addition to hosting images also provide a highly
interactive social community. Such communities generate rich metadata that can
naturally be harnessed for image classification and retrieval. Here we study
four popular benchmark datasets, extending them with social-network metadata,
such as the groups to which each image belongs, the comment thread associated
with the image, who uploaded it, their location, and their network of friends.
Since these types of data are inherently relational, we propose a model that
explicitly accounts for the interdependencies between images sharing common
properties. We model the task as a binary labeling problem on a network, and
use structured learning techniques to learn model parameters. We find that
social-network metadata are useful in a variety of classification tasks, in
many cases outperforming methods based on image content.Comment: ECCV 2012; 14 pages, 4 figure
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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