scholarly journals A Study on Large-Scale Cross-Media Retrieval of Wikipedia Images towards Visual Query and Textual Expansion

Author(s):  
Monelli Ayyavaraiah
Keyword(s):  
2019 ◽  
Vol 66 (12) ◽  
pp. 9868-9877 ◽  
Author(s):  
Gengshen Wu ◽  
Jungong Han ◽  
Zijia Lin ◽  
Guiguang Ding ◽  
Baochang Zhang ◽  
...  

2020 ◽  
Vol 26 (1) ◽  
pp. 1161-1171 ◽  
Author(s):  
Honghui Mei ◽  
Wei Chen ◽  
Yating Wei ◽  
Yuanzhe Hu ◽  
Shuyue Zhou ◽  
...  

2008 ◽  
Vol 126 (1) ◽  
pp. 120-131 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sara M. Grimes

This paper traces the migration of North American children's television into the realm of massively multiplayer online games (MMOGs), and the issues this raises in terms of the commercialisation of children's (digital) play. Through a content analysis of three television-themed MMOGs targeted to children, Nickelodeon's Nicktropolis, Cartoon Network's Big Fat Awesome House Party and Corus Entertainment's GalaXseeds, I examine how this new development within children's online culture operates in relation to existing industry practices of cross-media integration and promotion. Dominant trends identified in the content analysis are compared with emerging conventions within the MMOG genre, which is generally found to contain numerous opportunities for player creativity and collaboration. Within the cases examined, however, many of these opportunities have been omitted and ultimately replaced by promotional features. I conclude that all three case studies operate primarily as large-scale advergames, promoting transmedia intertextuality and third-party advertiser interests.


Author(s):  
Donglin Zhang ◽  
Xiao-Jun Wu ◽  
Jun Yu

Hashing methods have sparked a great revolution on large-scale cross-media search due to its effectiveness and efficiency. Most existing approaches learn unified hash representation in a common Hamming space to represent all multimodal data. However, the unified hash codes may not characterize the cross-modal data discriminatively, because the data may vary greatly due to its different dimensionalities, physical properties, and statistical information. In addition, most existing supervised cross-modal algorithms preserve the similarity relationship by constructing an n × n pairwise similarity matrix, which requires a large amount of calculation and loses the category information. To mitigate these issues, a novel cross-media hashing approach is proposed in this article, dubbed label flexible matrix factorization hashing (LFMH). Specifically, LFMH jointly learns the modality-specific latent subspace with similar semantic by the flexible matrix factorization. In addition, LFMH guides the hash learning by utilizing the semantic labels directly instead of the large n × n pairwise similarity matrix. LFMH transforms the heterogeneous data into modality-specific latent semantic representation. Therefore, we can obtain the hash codes by quantifying the representations, and the learned hash codes are consistent with the supervised labels of multimodal data. Then, we can obtain the similar binary codes of the corresponding modality, and the binary codes can characterize such samples flexibly. Accordingly, the derived hash codes have more discriminative power for single-modal and cross-modal retrieval tasks. Extensive experiments on eight different databases demonstrate that our model outperforms some competitive approaches.


Author(s):  
Tao Yao ◽  
Yiru Li ◽  
Weili Guan ◽  
Gang Wang ◽  
Ying Li ◽  
...  

2015 ◽  
Vol 43 (2) ◽  
Author(s):  
Peter Vasterman ◽  
Huub Wijfjes

Project X Haren research revisited. A critical analysis of the research project about the role of the media in the Facebook riots in September 2012 Project X Haren research revisited. A critical analysis of the research project about the role of the media in the Facebook riots in September 2012 In September 2012 the Dutch town of Haren witnessed a real-time version of a Project X party, starting with a Facebook event page and culminating in riots and substantial property destruction.The Cohen Committee studied the alleged mobilizing role of the news media and social media in the start-up phase. In this article a critical analysis will be made of the results and the methodology of this study. The results will be placed in the perspective of scientific research traditions on media and mobilization processes leading to large scale social disturbances. The Cohen Report tried to prove that a ‘cross-media-hype’ developed based on the critical mass on Facebook, but the empirical data contradict this position. They show that Facebook exploded after the first reports on Project X Haren in the news media. The concept of ‘cross media interactions’ leading to a powerful and comprehensive media hype is also quite problematic. It will be shown that new concepts are needed to analyze these complex interactions, combining different research paradigms on (online) media, youth culture and mobilization.


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