Publication
MMSP 2007
Conference paper

Contextual wisdom: Social relations and correlations for multimedia event annotation

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Abstract

This work deals with the problem of event annotation in social networks. The problem is made difficult due to variability of semantics and due to scarcity of labeled data. Events refer to real-world phenomena that occur at a specific time and place, and media and text tags are treated as facets of the event metadata. We are proposing a novel mechanism for event annotation by leveraging related sources (other annotators) in a social network. Our approach exploits event concept similarity, concept co-occurrence and annotator trust. We compute concept similarity measures across all facets. These measures are then used to compute event-event and user-user activity correlation. We compute inter-facet concept co-occurrence statistics from the annotations by each user. The annotator trust is determined by first requesting the trusted annotators (seeds) from each user and then propagating the trust amongst the social network using the biased PageRank algorithm. For a specific media instance to be annotated, we start the process from an initial query vector and the optimal recommendations are determined by using a coupling strategy between the global similarity matrix, and the trust weighted global co-occurrence matrix. The coupling links the common shared knowledge (similarity between concepts) that exists within the social network with trusted and personalized observations (concept co-occurrences). Our initial experiments on annotated everyday events are promising and show substantial gains against traditional SVM based techniques. Copyright 2007 ACM.

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MMSP 2007

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