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ImageCLEF

Experimental Evaluation in Visual Information Retrieval

  • Book
  • © 2010

Overview

  • Only Book comprehensively describing benchmarks for image retrieval
  • Written by the organizers of the ImageCLEF evaluation campaign
  • Includes lots of detailed descriptions of effective retrieval across multiple application domains
  • Includes supplementary material: sn.pub/extras

Part of the book series: The Information Retrieval Series (INRE, volume 32)

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Table of contents (27 chapters)

  1. Introduction

  2. Track Reports

  3. Participant reports

Keywords

About this book

The pervasive creation and consumption of content, especially visual content, is ingrained into our modern world. We’re constantly consuming visual media content, in printed form and in digital form, in work and in leisure pursuits. Like our cave– man forefathers, we use pictures to record things which are of importance to us as memory cues for the future, but nowadays we also use pictures and images to document processes; we use them in engineering, in art, in science, in medicine, in entertainment and we also use images in advertising. Moreover, when images are in digital format, either scanned from an analogue format or more often than not born digital, we can use the power of our computing and networking to exploit images to great effect. Most of the technical problems associated with creating, compressing, storing, transmitting, rendering and protecting image data are already solved. We use - cepted standards and have tremendous infrastructure and the only outstanding ch- lenges, apart from managing the scale issues associated with growth, are to do with locating images. That involves analysing them to determine their content, clas- fying them into related groupings, and searching for images. To overcome these challenges we currently rely on image metadata, the description of the images, - ther captured automatically at creation time or manually added afterwards.

Editors and Affiliations

  • HES-SO Business Information Systems, Sierre, Switzerland

    Henning Müller

  • Dept. Information Studies, University of Sheffield, Sheffield, United Kingdom

    Paul Clough

  • , Computer Vision Lab/ETF-C 113.2, ETH Zürich, Zürich, Switzerland

    Thomas Deselaers

  • Idiap Research Institute, Martigny, Switzerland

    Barbara Caputo

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