35 research outputs found

    News story segmentation in the FĂ­schlĂĄr video indexing system

    Get PDF
    This paper presents an approach to segmenting individual news stories in broadcast news programmes. The approach first performs shot boundary detection and keyframe extraction on the programme. Shots are then clustered into groups based on their colour and temporal similarity. The clustering process is controlled using the groups' statistics. After clustering, a set of criteria are applied and groups are successively eliminated in order to converge upon a set of anchorperson groups. The temporal locations of the shots in these anchorperson groups are then used to segment the programme in terms of individual news items. This work is carried out within the context of a complete video indexing, browsing and retrieval syste

    Face detection and clustering for video indexing applications

    Get PDF
    This paper describes a method for automatically detecting human faces in generic video sequences. We employ an iterative algorithm in order to give a confidence measure for the presence or absence of faces within video shots. Skin colour filtering is carried out on a selected number of frames per video shot, followed by the application of shape and size heuristics. Finally, the remaining candidate regions are normalized and projected into an eigenspace, the reconstruction error being the measure of confidence for presence/absence of face. Following this, the confidence score for the entire video shot is calculated. In order to cluster extracted faces into a set of face classes, we employ an incremental procedure using a PCA-based dissimilarity measure in con-junction with spatio-temporal correlation. Experiments were carried out on a representative broadcast news test corpus

    Rhythm detection for speech-music discrimination in MPEG compressed domain

    Get PDF
    A novel approach to speech-music discrimination based on rhythm (or beat) detection is introduced. Rhythmic pulses are detected by applying a long-term autocorrelation method on band-passed signals. This approach is combined with another, in which the features describe the energy peaks of the signal. The discriminator uses just three features that are computed from data directly taken from an MPEG-1 bitstream. The discriminator was tested on more than 3 hours of audio data. Average recognition rate is 97.7%

    Evaluation of automatic shot boundary detection on a large video test suite

    Get PDF
    The challenge facing the indexing of digital video information in order to support browsing and retrieval by users, is to design systems that can accurately and automatically process large amounts of heterogeneous video. The segmentation of video material into shots and scenes is the basic operation in the analysis of video content. This paper presents a detailed evaluation of a histogram-based shot cut detector based on eight hours of TV broadcast video. Our observations are that the selection of similarity thresholds for determining shot boundaries in such broadcast video is difficult and necessitates the development of systems that employ adaptive thresholding in order to address the huge variation of characteristics prevalent in TV broadcast video

    An experiment in audio classification from compressed data

    Get PDF
    In this paper we present an algorithm for automatic classification of sound into speech, instrumental sound/ music and silence. The method is based on thresholding of features derived from the modulation envelope of the frequency limited audio signal. Four characteristics are examined for discrimination: the occurrence and duration of energy peaks, rhythmic content and the level of harmonic content. The proposed algorithm allows classification directly on MPEG-1 audio bitstreams. The performance of the classifier was evaluated on TRECVID test data. The test results are above-average among all TREC participants. The approaches adopted by other research groups participating in TREC are also discussed

    Automatic detection and extraction of artificial text in video

    Get PDF
    A significant challenge in large multimedia databases is the provision of efficient means for semantic indexing and retrieval of visual information. Artificial text in video is normally generated in order to supplement or summarise the visual content and thus is an important carrier of information that is highly relevant to the content of the video. As such, it is a potential ready-to-use source of semantic information. In this paper we present an algorithm for detection and localisation of artificial text in video using a horizontal difference magnitude measure and morphological processing. The result of character segmentation, based on a modified version of the Wolf-Jolion algorithm [1][2] is enhanced using smoothing and multiple binarisation. The output text is input to an “off-the-shelf” noncommercial OCR. Detection, localisation and recognition results for a 20min long MPEG-1 encoded television programme are presented

    A framework for event detection in field-sports video broadcasts based on SVM generated audio-visual feature model. Case-study: soccer video

    Get PDF
    In this paper we propose a novel audio-visual feature-based framework, for event detection in field sports broadcast video. The system is evaluated via a case-study involving MPEG encoded soccer video. Specifically, the evidence gathered by various feature detectors is combined by means of a learning algorithm (a support vector machine), which infers the occurrence of an event, based on a model generated during a training phase, utilizing a corpus of 25 hours of content. The system is evaluated using 25 hours of separate test content. Following an evaluation of results obtained, it is shown for this case, that both high precision and recall statistics are achievable

    Audio processing for automatic TV sports program highlights detection

    Get PDF
    In today’s fast paced world, the time available to watch long sports programmes is decreasing, while the number of sports channels is rapidly increasing. Many viewers desire the facility to watch just the highlights of sports events. This paper presents a simple, but effective, method for generating sports video highlights summaries. Our method detects semantically important events in sports programmes by using the Scale Factors in the MPEG audio bitstream to generate an audio amplitude profile of the program. The Scale Factors for the subbands corresponding to the voice bandwidth give a strong indication of the level of commentator and/or spectator excitement. When periods of sustained high audio amplitude have been detected and ranked, the corresponding video shots may be concatenated to produce a summary of the program highlights. Our method uses only the Scale Factor information that is directly accessible from the MPEG bitstream, without any decoding, leading to highly efficient computation. It is also rather more generic than many existing techniques, being particularly suitable for the more popular sports televised in Ireland such as soccer, Gaelic football, hurling, rugby, horse racing and motor racing

    An automatic technique for visual quality classification for MPEG-1 video

    Get PDF
    The Centre for Digital Video Processing at Dublin City University developed Fischlar [1], a web-based system for recording, analysis, browsing and playback of digitally captured television programs. One major issue for Fischlar is the automatic evaluation of video quality in order to avoid processing and storage of corrupted data. In this paper we propose an automatic classification technique that detects the video content quality in order to provide a decision criterion for the processing and storage stages

    Low power techniques for video compression

    Get PDF
    This paper gives an overview of low-power techniques proposed in the literature for mobile multimedia and Internet applications. Exploitable aspects are discussed in the behavior of different video compression tools. These power-efficient solutions are then classified by synthesis domain and level of abstraction. As this paper is meant to be a starting point for further research in the area, a lowpower hardware & software co-design methodology is outlined in the end as a possible scenario for video-codec-on-a-chip implementations on future mobile multimedia platforms
    corecore