Semantics-based selection of everyday concepts in visual lifelogging

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Abstract

Concept-based indexing, based on identifying various semantic concepts appearing in multimedia, is an attractive option for multimedia retrieval and much research tries to bridge the semantic gap between the media’s low-level features and high-level semantics. Research into concept-based multimedia retrieval has generally focussed on detecting concepts from high-quality media such as broadcast TV or movies, but it is not well addressed in other domains like lifelogging where the original data is captured with poorer quality. We argue that in noisy domains such as lifelogging, the management of data needs to include semantic reasoning in order to deduce a set of concepts to represent lifelog content for applications like searching, browsing or summarization. Using semantic concepts to manage lifelog data relies on the fusion of automatically detected concepts to provide a better understanding of the lifelog data. In this paper, we investigate the selection of semantic concepts for lifelogging which includes reasoning on semantic networks using a density-based approach. In a series of experiments we compare different semantic reasoning approaches and the experimental evaluations we report on lifelog data show the efficacy of our approach.

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CITATION STYLE

APA

Wang, P., & Smeaton, A. F. (2012). Semantics-based selection of everyday concepts in visual lifelogging. International Journal of Multimedia Information Retrieval, 1(2), 87–101. https://doi.org/10.1007/s13735-012-0010-8

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