posted on 2007-03-01, 00:00authored byMichael G Christel, Milind R Naphade, Apostal Natsev, Jelena Tesic
The contributions of automatic semantic concept
classifiers for interactive filtering (classifiers in
conjunction with query rankings) and browsing
(classifiers in lieu of query rankings) are tested against
three test corpora: an amateur photo collection,
documentary video, and news video. Results show that
current classifiers offer browsing utility twice as good as
having no classifier at all, and that continuous
improvements in the classifiers produce comparable
improvements in the browsing utility. For filtering a wellordered
set of results (e.g., a set retrieved from text
search), concept classifiers need greater accuracy:
current classifiers showed worse performance than not
filtering at all, even when the classifiers’ accuracy is
nearly doubled. Results are consistent for all test
corpora. Hence, automatic semantic concepts can offer
significant utility for browsing at current levels of
accuracy, but the requirement is much higher for filtering
a well-ordered set of results, where extreme accuracy is
necessary before benefits are seen.