In this paper we present our interactive lifelog retrieval engine in the LSC'20 comparative benchmarking challenge. The LifeSeeker 2.0 interactive lifelog retrieval engine is developed by both Dublin City University and Ho Chi Minh University of Science, which represents an enhanced version of the two corresponding interactive lifelog retrieval engines in LSC'19. The implementation of LifeSeeker 2.0 has been designed to focus on the searching by text query using a Bag-of-Words model with visual concept augmentation and additional improvements in query processing time, enhanced result display and browsing support, and interacting with visual graphs for both query and filter purposes. CCS CONCEPTS• Information systems → Multimedia databases; Users and interactive retrieval; Search interfaces; • Human-centered computing → Interactive systems and tools.
Lifelog can provide useful insights of our daily activities. It is essential to provide a flexible way for users to retrieve certain events or moments of interest, corresponding to a wide variation of query types. This motivates us to develop FIRST, a Flexible Interactive Retrieval SysTem, to help users to combine or integrate various query components in a flexible manner to handle different query scenarios, such as visual clustering data based on color histogram, visual similarity, GPS location, or scene attributes. We also employ personalized concept detection and image captioning to enhance image understanding from visual lifelog data, and develop an autoencoderlike approach for query text and image feature mapping. Furthermore, we refine the user interface of the retrieval system to better assist users in query expansion and verifying sequential events in a flexible temporal resolution to control the navigation speed through sequences of images. CCS CONCEPTS • Information systems → Search interfaces; Multimedia databases; • Human-centered computing → Interactive systems and tools.
In this paper we present our interactive lifelog retrieval engine in the LSC'20 comparative benchmarking challenge. The LifeSeeker 2.0 interactive lifelog retrieval engine is developed by both Dublin City University and Ho Chi Minh University of Science, which represents an enhanced version of the two corresponding interactive lifelog retrieval engines in LSC'19. The implementation of LifeSeeker 2.0 has been designed to focus on the searching by text query using a Bag-of-Words model with visual concept augmentation and additional improvements in query processing time, enhanced result display and browsing support, and interacting with visual graphs for both query and filter purposes. CCS CONCEPTS • Information systems → Multimedia databases; Users and interactive retrieval; Search interfaces; • Human-centered computing → Interactive systems and tools.
Lifelogging refers to the process of digitally capturing a continuous and detailed trace of life activities in a passive manner. In order to assist the research community to make progress in the organisation and retrieval of data from lifelog archives, a lifelog task was organised at NTCIR since edition 12. Lifelog-3 was the third running of the lifelog task (at NTCIR-14) and the Lifelog-3 task explored three different lifelog data access related challenges, the search challenge, the annotation challenge and the insights challenge. In this paper we review the dataset created for this activity, activities of participating teams who took part in these challenges and we highlight learnings for the community from the NTCIR-Lifelog challenges.
Building a retrieval system with lifelogging data is more complicated than with ordinary data due to the redundancies, blurriness, massive amount of data, various sources of information accompanying lifelogging data, and especially the ad-hoc nature of queries. The Lifelog Search Challenge (LSC) is a benchmarking challenge that encourages researchers and developers to push the boundaries in lifelog retrieval. For LSC'22, we develop FIRST 3.0, a novel and flexible system that leverages expressive cross-domain embeddings to enhance the searching process. Our system aims to adaptively capture the semantics of an image at different levels of detail. We also propose to augment our system with an external search engine to help our system with initial visual examples for unfamiliar concepts. Finally, we organize image data in hierarchical clusters based on their visual similarity and location to assist users in data exploration. Experiments show that our system is both fast and effective in handling various retrieval scenarios. CCS CONCEPTS• Information systems → Search interfaces; Multimedia databases; • Human-centered computing → Interactive systems and tools.
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