Multimedia information have strong temporal correlations that shape the way modalities co-occur over time. In this paper we study the dynamic nature of multimedia and social-media information, where the temporal dimension emerges as a strong source of evidence for learning the temporal correlations across visual and textual modalities. So far, cross-media retrieval models, explored the correlations between different modalities (e.g. text and image) to learn a common subspace, in which semantically similar instances lie in the same neighbourhood. Building on such knowledge, we propose a novel temporal cross-media neural architecture, that departs from standard cross-media methods, by explicitly accounting for the temporal dimension through temporal subspace learning. The model is softly-constrained with temporal and inter-modality constraints that guide the new subspace learning task by favouring temporal correlations between semantically similar and temporally close instances. Experiments on three distinct datasets show that accounting for time turns out to be important for cross-media retrieval. Namely, the proposed method outperforms a set of baselines on the task of temporal cross-media retrieval, demonstrating its effectiveness for performing temporal subspace learning.
Understanding the semantic shifts of multimodal information is only possible with models that capture cross-modal interactions over time. Under this paradigm, a new embedding is needed that structures visual-textual interactions according to the temporal dimension, thus, preserving data's original temporal organisation. This paper introduces a novel diachronic cross-modal embedding (DCM), where cross-modal correlations are represented in embedding space, throughout the temporal dimension, preserving semantic similarity at each instant t. To achieve this, we trained a neural cross-modal architecture, under a novel ranking loss strategy, that for each multimodal instance, enforces neighbour instances' temporal alignment, through subspace structuring constraints based on a temporal alignment window. Experimental results show that our DCM embedding successfully organises instances over time. Quantitative experiments, confirm that DCM is able to preserve semantic cross-modal correlations at each instant t while also providing better alignment capabilities. Qualitative experiments unveil new ways to browse multimodal content and hint that multimodal understanding tasks can benefit from this new embedding.
Media editors in the newsroom are constantly pressed to provide a "like-being there" coverage of live events. Social media provides a disorganised collection of images and videos that media professionals need to grasp before publishing their latest news updated. Automated news visual storyline editing with social media content can be very challenging, as it not only entails the task of finding the right content but also making sure that news content evolves coherently over time. To tackle these issues, this paper proposes a benchmark for assessing social media visual storylines. The So-cialStories benchmark, comprised by total of 40 curated stories covering sports and cultural events, provides the experimental setup and introduces novel quantitative metrics to perform a rigorous evaluation of visual storytelling with social media data.
Cross-modal embeddings, between textual and visual modalities, aim to organise multimodal instances by their semantic correlations. State-of-the-art approaches use maximum-margin methods, based on the hinge-loss, to enforce a constant margin m, to separate projections of multimodal instances from different categories. In this paper, we propose a novel scheduled adaptive maximum-margin (SAM) formulation that infers triplet-specific constraints during training, therefore organising instances by adaptively enforcing inter-category and inter-modality correlations. This is supported by a scheduled adaptive margin function, that is smoothly activated, replacing a static margin by an adaptively inferred one reflecting triplet-specific semantic correlations while accounting for the incremental learning behaviour of neural networks to enforce category cluster formation and enforcement. Experiments on widely used datasets show that our model improved upon state-of-the-art approaches, by achieving a relative improvement of up to ≈ 12.5% over the second best method, thus confirming the effectiveness of our scheduled adaptive margin formulation.
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