2,458 research outputs found
No-reference bitstream-based visual quality impairment detection for high definition H.264/AVC encoded video sequences
Ensuring and maintaining adequate Quality of Experience towards end-users are key objectives for video service providers, not only for increasing customer satisfaction but also as service differentiator. However, in the case of High Definition video streaming over IP-based networks, network impairments such as packet loss can severely degrade the perceived visual quality. Several standard organizations have established a minimum set of performance objectives which should be achieved for obtaining satisfactory quality. Therefore, video service providers should continuously monitor the network and the quality of the received video streams in order to detect visual degradations. Objective video quality metrics enable automatic measurement of perceived quality. Unfortunately, the most reliable metrics require access to both the original and the received video streams which makes them inappropriate for real-time monitoring. In this article, we present a novel no-reference bitstream-based visual quality impairment detector which enables real-time detection of visual degradations caused by network impairments. By only incorporating information extracted from the encoded bitstream, network impairments are classified as visible or invisible to the end-user. Our results show that impairment visibility can be classified with a high accuracy which enables real-time validation of the existing performance objectives
An efficient closed frequent itemset miner for the MOA stream mining system
Mining itemsets is a central task in data mining, both in the batch and the streaming paradigms. While robust, efficient, and well-tested implementations exist for batch mining, hardly any publicly available equivalent exists for the streaming scenario. The lack of an efficient, usable tool for the task hinders its use by practitioners and makes it difficult to assess new research in the area. To alleviate this situation, we review the algorithms described in the literature, and implement and evaluate the IncMine algorithm by Cheng, Ke, and Ng (2008) for mining frequent closed itemsets from data streams. Our implementation works on top of the MOA (Massive Online Analysis) stream mining framework to ease its use and integration with other stream mining tasks. We provide a PAC-style rigorous analysis of the quality of the output of IncMine as a function of its parameters; this type of analysis is rare in pattern mining algorithms. As a by-product, the analysis shows how one of the user-provided parameters in the original description can be removed entirely while retaining the performance guarantees. Finally, we experimentally confirm both on synthetic and real data the excellent performance of the algorithm, as reported in the original paper, and its ability to handle concept drift.Postprint (published version
Reservoir of Diverse Adaptive Learners and Stacking Fast Hoeffding Drift Detection Methods for Evolving Data Streams
The last decade has seen a surge of interest in adaptive learning algorithms
for data stream classification, with applications ranging from predicting ozone
level peaks, learning stock market indicators, to detecting computer security
violations. In addition, a number of methods have been developed to detect
concept drifts in these streams. Consider a scenario where we have a number of
classifiers with diverse learning styles and different drift detectors.
Intuitively, the current 'best' (classifier, detector) pair is application
dependent and may change as a result of the stream evolution. Our research
builds on this observation. We introduce the \mbox{Tornado} framework that
implements a reservoir of diverse classifiers, together with a variety of drift
detection algorithms. In our framework, all (classifier, detector) pairs
proceed, in parallel, to construct models against the evolving data streams. At
any point in time, we select the pair which currently yields the best
performance. We further incorporate two novel stacking-based drift detection
methods, namely the \mbox{FHDDMS} and \mbox{FHDDMS}_{add} approaches. The
experimental evaluation confirms that the current 'best' (classifier, detector)
pair is not only heavily dependent on the characteristics of the stream, but
also that this selection evolves as the stream flows. Further, our
\mbox{FHDDMS} variants detect concept drifts accurately in a timely fashion
while outperforming the state-of-the-art.Comment: 42 pages, and 14 figure
A Collaborative Kalman Filter for Time-Evolving Dyadic Processes
We present the collaborative Kalman filter (CKF), a dynamic model for
collaborative filtering and related factorization models. Using the matrix
factorization approach to collaborative filtering, the CKF accounts for time
evolution by modeling each low-dimensional latent embedding as a
multidimensional Brownian motion. Each observation is a random variable whose
distribution is parameterized by the dot product of the relevant Brownian
motions at that moment in time. This is naturally interpreted as a Kalman
filter with multiple interacting state space vectors. We also present a method
for learning a dynamically evolving drift parameter for each location by
modeling it as a geometric Brownian motion. We handle posterior intractability
via a mean-field variational approximation, which also preserves tractability
for downstream calculations in a manner similar to the Kalman filter. We
evaluate the model on several large datasets, providing quantitative evaluation
on the 10 million Movielens and 100 million Netflix datasets and qualitative
evaluation on a set of 39 million stock returns divided across roughly 6,500
companies from the years 1962-2014.Comment: Appeared at 2014 IEEE International Conference on Data Mining (ICDM
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