Clustering Social Event Images Using Kernel Canonical Correlation Analysis

Unaiza Ahsan, Irfan Essa; Proceedings of the IEEE Conference on Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition (CVPR) Workshops, 2014, pp. 800-805

Abstract


Sharing user experiences in form of photographs, tweets, text, audio and/or video has become commonplace in social networking websites. Browsing through large collections of social multimedia remains a cumbersome task. It requires a user to initiate textual search query and manually go through a list of resulting images to find relevant information. We propose an automatic clustering algorithm, which, given a large collection of images, groups them into clusters of different events using the image features and related metadata. We formulate this problem as a kernel canonical correlation clustering problem in which data samples from different modalities or 'views' are projected to a space where correlations between the samples' projections are maximized. Our approach enables us to learn a semantic representation of potentially uncorrelated feature sets and this representation is clustered to give unique social events. Furthermore, we leverage the rich information associated with each uploaded image (such as usernames, dates/timestamps, etc.) and empirically determine which combination of feature sets yields the best clustering score for a dataset of 100,000 images.

Related Material


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[bibtex]
@InProceedings{Ahsan_2014_CVPR_Workshops,
author = {Ahsan, Unaiza and Essa, Irfan},
title = {Clustering Social Event Images Using Kernel Canonical Correlation Analysis},
booktitle = {Proceedings of the IEEE Conference on Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition (CVPR) Workshops},
month = {June},
year = {2014}
}