3 research outputs found

    ImageCLEF 2019: Multimedia Retrieval in Lifelogging, Medical, Nature, and Security Applications

    Get PDF
    This paper presents an overview of the foreseen ImageCLEF 2019 lab that will be organized as part of the Conference and Labs of the Evaluation Forum - CLEF Labs 2019. ImageCLEF is an ongoing evaluation initiative (started in 2003) that promotes the evaluation of technologies for annotation, indexing and retrieval of visual data with the aim of providing information access to large collections of images in various usage scenarios and domains. In 2019, the 17th edition of ImageCLEF will run four main tasks: (i) a Lifelog task (videos, images and other sources) about daily activities understanding, retrieval and summarization, (ii) a Medical task that groups three previous tasks (caption analysis, tuberculosis prediction, and medical visual question answering) with newer data, (iii) a new Coral task about segmenting and labeling collections of coral images for 3D modeling, and (iv) a new Security task addressing the problems of automatically identifying forged content and retrieve hidden information. The strong participation, with over 100 research groups registering and 31 submitting results for the tasks in 2018 shows an important interest in this benchmarking campaign and we expect the new tasks to attract at least as many researchers for 2019

    ImageCLEF 2019: Multimedia Retrieval in Medicine, Lifelogging, Security and Nature

    Get PDF
    This paper presents an overview of the ImageCLEF 2019 lab, organized as part of the Conference and Labs of the Evaluation Forum - CLEF Labs 2019. ImageCLEF is an ongoing evaluation initiative (started in 2003) that promotes the evaluation of technologies for annotation, indexing and retrieval of visual data with the aim of providing information access to large collections of images in various usage scenarios and domains. In 2019, the 17th edition of ImageCLEF runs four main tasks: (i) a medical task that groups three previous tasks (caption analysis, tuberculosis prediction, and medical visual question answering) with new data, (ii) a lifelog task (videos, images and other sources) about daily activities understanding, retrieval and summarization, (iii) a new security task addressing the problems of automatically identifying forged content and retrieve hidden information, and (iv) a new coral task about segmenting and labeling collections of coral images for 3D modeling. The strong participation, with 235 research groups registering, and 63 submitting over 359 runs, shows an important interest in this benchmark campaign

    Overview of the ImageCLEFsecurity 2019: File Forgery Detection Tasks

    Full text link
    The File Forgery Detection tasks is in its first edition, in 2019. This year, it is composed by three subtasks: a) Forged file discovery, b) Stego image discovery and c) Secret message discovery. The data set contained 6,400 images and pdf files, divided into 3 sets. There were 61 participants and the majority of them participated in all the subtasks. This highlights the major concern the scientific community shows for security issues and the importance of each subtask. Submissions varied from a) 8, b) 31 and c) 14 submissions for each subtask, respectively. Although the datasets were small, most of the participants used deep learning techniques, especially in subtasks 2 & 3. The results obtained in subtask 3-which was the most difficult one-showed that there is room for improvement, as more advanced techniques are needed to achieve better results. Deep learning techniques adopted by many researchers is a preamble in that direction, and proved that they may provide a promising steganalysis tool to a digital forensics examiner
    corecore