Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
537432 Signal Processing: Image Communication 2009 16 Pages PDF
Abstract

The management of large video databases, especially those containing motion picture and television data, is a major contemporary challenge. A very significant tool for this management is the ability to retrieve those segments that are perceptually similar to a query segment. Another similar but equally important task is determining if a query segment is a (possibly modified) copy of part of a video in the database. The basic way to perform these two tasks is to characterize each video segment with a unique representation called a signature. Using semantic information for the construction of the signatures is a good way to ensure robustness in retrieval and fingerprinting. Here a ubiquitous semantic feature, namely the existence and identity of human faces, will be used to construct the signature. A fast algorithm has been developed to quickly and robustly perform these two tasks on very large video databases. The prerequisite face recognition was performed by a commercial system. Having verified the basic efficacy of our algorithm on a database of real video from motion pictures and television series, we then proceed to further explore its performance in an artificial digital video database, which was created using a probabilistic model of the video creation process. This enabled us to explore variations in performance based on parameters that were impossible to control in a real video database. Furthermore, the suitability of the proposed approach for very large databases was tested using (artificial) data corresponding to hundreds or thousands of hours of video.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Computer Science Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition
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