Conference item icon

Conference item

An investigation into event decay from large personal media archives

Abstract:
With the growth of digital lifelogging technologies there are challenges in terms of detecting and annotating real world events from this multimedia lifelog data. In this paper we use the SenseCam, a passively capturing wearable camera, worn around the neck, which captures about 3,000 photos per day, thereby creating a personal lifelog or visual recording of the wearer's life, which could be helpful as a human memory aid. For such a large amount of visual information to be of any value, it needs to be structured into semantic events. In this paper we are particularly interested in how a user's perceptions of real world events decays over time. In particular we investigate several questions including whether data owners have different perceptions of event boundaries to non-owners, whether the passage of time changes what we believe to be events and if so then do we forget about the weakly defined original events. We carry out these investigations using real visual lifelog data gathered and annotated, twice, by three users. Copyright 2009 ACM.

Actions


Access Document


Publisher copy:
10.1145/1631024.1631035

Authors



Host title:
1st ACM International Workshop on Events in Multimedia - EiMM'09, Co-located with the 2009 ACM International Conference on Multimedia, MM'09
Pages:
49-55
Publication date:
2009-01-01
DOI:
ISBN:
9781605587547


Keywords:
Pubs id:
pubs:384038
UUID:
uuid:bd5163b4-1551-4e0e-879e-3171fc2e05a4
Local pid:
pubs:384038
Source identifiers:
384038
Deposit date:
2013-11-16

Terms of use



Views and Downloads






If you are the owner of this record, you can report an update to it here: Report update to this record

TO TOP