1,305 research outputs found
Automatic summarization of rushes video using bipartite graphs
In this paper we present a new approach for automatic summarization of rushes video. Our approach is composed of three main steps. First, based on a temporal segmentation, we filter sub-shots with low information content not likely to be useful in a summary. Second, a method using maximal matching in a bipartite graph is adapted to measure similarity between the remaining shots and to minimize inter-shot redundancy by removing repetitive retake shots common in rushes content. Finally, the presence of faces and the motion intensity are characterised in each sub-shot. A measure of how representative the sub-shot is in the context of the overall video is then proposed. Video summaries composed of keyframe slideshows are then generated. In order to evaluate the effectiveness of this approach we re-run the evaluation carried out by the TREC, using the same dataset and evaluation metrics used in the TRECVID video summarization task in 2007 but with our own assessors. Results show that our approach leads to a significant improvement in terms of the fraction of the TRECVID summary ground truth included and is competitive with other approaches in TRECVID 2007
Automatic summarization of rushes video using bipartite graphs
In this paper we present a new approach for automatic summarization of rushes, or unstructured video. Our approach is composed of three major steps. First, based on shot and sub-shot segmentations, we filter sub-shots with low information content not likely to be useful in a summary. Second, a method using maximal matching in a bipartite graph is adapted to measure similarity between the remaining shots and to minimize inter-shot redundancy by removing repetitive retake shots common in rushes video. Finally, the presence of faces and motion intensity are characterised in each sub-shot. A measure of how representative the sub-shot is in the context of the overall video is then proposed. Video summaries composed of keyframe slideshows are then generated. In order to evaluate the effectiveness of this approach we re-run the evaluation carried out by TRECVid, using the same dataset and evaluation metrics used in the TRECVid video summarization task in 2007 but with our own assessors. Results show that our approach leads to a significant improvement on our own work in terms of the fraction of the TRECVid summary ground truth included and is competitive with the best of other approaches in TRECVid 2007
Large-scale interactive exploratory visual search
Large scale visual search has been one of the challenging issues in the era of big data. It demands techniques that are not only highly effective and efficient but also allow users conveniently express their information needs and refine their intents. In this thesis, we focus on developing an exploratory framework for large scale visual search. We also develop a number of enabling techniques in this thesis, including compact visual content representation for scalable search, near duplicate video shot detection, and action based event detection. We propose a novel scheme for extremely low bit rate visual search, which sends compressed visual words consisting of vocabulary tree histogram and descriptor orientations rather than descriptors. Compact representation of video data is achieved through identifying keyframes of a video which can also help users comprehend visual content efficiently. We propose a novel Bag-of-Importance model for static video summarization. Near duplicate detection is one of the key issues for large scale visual search, since there exist a large number nearly identical images and videos. We propose an improved near-duplicate video shot detection approach for more effective shot representation. Event detection has been one of the solutions for bridging the semantic gap in visual search. We particular focus on human action centred event detection. We propose an enhanced sparse coding scheme to model human actions. Our proposed approach is able to significantly reduce computational cost while achieving recognition accuracy highly comparable to the state-of-the-art methods. At last, we propose an integrated solution for addressing the prime challenges raised from large-scale interactive visual search. The proposed system is also one of the first attempts for exploratory visual search. It provides users more robust results to satisfy their exploring experiences
Large-scale image collection cleansing, summarization and exploration
A perennially interesting topic in the research field of large scale image collection organization is how to effectively and efficiently conduct the tasks of image cleansing, summarization and exploration. The primary objective of such an image organization system is to enhance user exploration experience with redundancy removal and summarization operations on large-scale image collection. An ideal system is to discover and utilize the visual correlation among the images, to reduce the redundancy in large-scale image collection, to organize and visualize the structure of large-scale image collection, and to facilitate exploration and knowledge discovery.
In this dissertation, a novel system is developed for exploiting and navigating large-scale image collection. Our system consists of the following key components: (a) junk image filtering by incorporating bilingual search results; (b) near duplicate image detection by using a coarse-to-fine framework; (c) concept network generation and visualization; (d) image collection summarization via dictionary learning for sparse representation; and (e) a multimedia practice of graffiti image retrieval and exploration.
For junk image filtering, bilingual image search results, which are adopted for the same keyword-based query, are integrated to automatically identify the clusters for the junk images and the clusters for the relevant images. Within relevant image clusters, the results are further refined by removing the duplications under a coarse-to-fine structure. The duplicate pairs are detected with both global feature (partition based color histogram) and local feature (CPAM and SIFT Bag-of-Word model). The duplications are detected and removed from the data collection to facilitate further exploration and visual correlation analysis. After junk image filtering and duplication removal, the visual concepts are further organized and visualized by the proposed concept network. An automatic algorithm is developed to generate such visual concept network which characterizes the visual correlation between image concept pairs. Multiple kernels are combined and a kernel canonical correlation analysis algorithm is used to characterize the diverse visual similarity contexts between the image concepts. The FishEye visualization technique is implemented to facilitate the navigation of image concepts through our image concept network. To better assist the exploration of large scale data collection, we design an efficient summarization algorithm to extract representative examplars. For this collection summarization task, a sparse dictionary (a small set of the most representative images) is learned to represent all the images in the given set, e.g., such sparse dictionary is treated as the summary for the given image set. The simulated annealing algorithm is adopted to learn such sparse dictionary (image summary) by minimizing an explicit optimization function.
In order to handle large scale image collection, we have evaluated both the accuracy performance of the proposed algorithms and their computation efficiency. For each of the above tasks, we have conducted experiments on multiple public available image collections, such as ImageNet, NUS-WIDE, LabelMe, etc. We have observed very promising results compared to existing frameworks. The computation performance is also satisfiable for large-scale image collection applications. The original intention to design such a large-scale image collection exploration and organization system is to better service the tasks of information retrieval and knowledge discovery. For this purpose, we utilize the proposed system to a graffiti retrieval and exploration application and receive positive feedback
Novel perspectives and approaches to video summarization
The increasing volume of videos requires efficient and effective techniques to index and structure videos. Video summarization is such a technique that extracts the essential information from a video, so that tasks such as comprehension by users and video content analysis can be conducted more effectively and efficiently. The research presented in this thesis investigates three novel perspectives of the video summarization problem and provides approaches to such perspectives. Our first perspective is to employ local keypoint to perform keyframe selection. Two criteria, namely Coverage and Redundancy, are introduced to guide the keyframe selection process in order to identify those representing maximum video content and sharing minimum redundancy. To efficiently deal with long videos, a top-down strategy is proposed, which splits the summarization problem to two sub-problems: scene identification and scene summarization. Our second perspective is to formulate the task of video summarization to the problem of sparse dictionary reconstruction. Our method utilizes the true sparse constraint L0 norm, instead of the relaxed constraint L2,1 norm, such that keyframes are directly selected as a sparse dictionary that can reconstruct the video frames. In addition, a Percentage Of Reconstruction (POR) criterion is proposed to intuitively guide users in selecting an appropriate length of the summary. In addition, an L2,0 constrained sparse dictionary selection model is also proposed to further verify the effectiveness of sparse dictionary reconstruction for video summarization. Lastly, we further investigate the multi-modal perspective of multimedia content summarization and enrichment. There are abundant images and videos on the Web, so it is highly desirable to effectively organize such resources for textual content enrichment. With the support of web scale images, our proposed system, namely StoryImaging, is capable of enriching arbitrary textual stories with visual content
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Multimodal News Summarization, Tracking and Annotation Incorporating Tensor Analysis of Memes
We demonstrate four novel multimodal methods for efficient video summarization and comprehensive cross-cultural news video understanding.
First, For video quick browsing, we demonstrate a multimedia event recounting system. Based on nine people-oriented design principles, it summarizes YouTube-like videos into short visual segments (812sec) and textual words (less than 10 terms). In the 2013 Trecvid Multimedia Event Recounting competition, this system placed first in recognition time efficiency, while remaining above average in description accuracy.
Secondly, we demonstrate the summarization of large amounts of online international news videos. In order to understand an international event such as Ebola virus, AirAsia Flight 8501 and Zika virus comprehensively, we present a novel and efficient constrained tensor factorization algorithm that first represents a video archive of multimedia news stories concerning a news event as a sparse tensor of order 4. The dimensions correspond to extracted visual memes, verbal tags, time periods, and cultures. The iterative algorithm approximately but accurately extracts coherent quad-clusters, each of which represents a significant summary of an important independent aspect of the news event. We give examples of quad-clusters extracted from tensors with at least 108 entries derived from international news coverage. We show the method is fast, can be tuned to give preferences to any subset of its four dimensions, and exceeds three existing methods in performance.
Thirdly, noting that the co-occurrence of visual memes and tags in our summarization result is sparse, we show how to model cross-cultural visual meme influence based on normalized PageRank, which more accurately captures the rates at which visual memes are reposted in a specified time period in a specified culture.
Lastly, we establish the correspondences of videos and text descriptions in different cultures by reliable visual cues, detect culture-specific tags for visual memes and then annotate videos in a cultural settings. Starting with any video with less text or no text in one culture (say, US), we select candidate annotations in the text of another culture (say, China) to annotate US video. Through analyzing the similarity of images annotated by those candidates, we can derive a set of proper tags from the viewpoints of another culture (China). We illustrate cultural-based annotation examples by segments of international news. We evaluate the generated tags by cross-cultural tag frequency, tag precision, and user studies
Ranking News-Quality Multimedia
News editors need to find the photos that best illustrate a news piece and
fulfill news-media quality standards, while being pressed to also find the most
recent photos of live events. Recently, it became common to use social-media
content in the context of news media for its unique value in terms of immediacy
and quality. Consequently, the amount of images to be considered and filtered
through is now too much to be handled by a person. To aid the news editor in
this process, we propose a framework designed to deliver high-quality,
news-press type photos to the user. The framework, composed of two parts, is
based on a ranking algorithm tuned to rank professional media highly and a
visual SPAM detection module designed to filter-out low-quality media. The core
ranking algorithm is leveraged by aesthetic, social and deep-learning semantic
features. Evaluation showed that the proposed framework is effective at finding
high-quality photos (true-positive rate) achieving a retrieval MAP of 64.5% and
a classification precision of 70%.Comment: To appear in ICMR'1
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