Software Learns to Tag Photos Brunswick GA

Thousands of online images from Flickr have already been tagged accurately by a new software program.

Local Companies

Wolf Camera
(770) 552-6315
8725 Roswell Rd
Roswell, GA
Wolf Camera
(678) 560-2204
2154 Roswell Rd
Marietta, GA
Wolf Camera
(770) 552-6315
8725 Roswell Rd
Roswell, GA
Wolf Camera
(770) 822-6990
4850 Sugarloaf Pkwy
Lawrenceville, GA
Maxwell Precision Optics
(404) 244-0095
Decatur, GA
Wolf Camera Howell Mill Village
(404) 603-5467
2020 Howell Mill Rd NW
Atlanta, GA
Wolf Camera Full Service Stores and 1 Hour Labs
(678) 339-0106
3070 Windward Plz
Alpharetta, GA
Wolf Camera Sandy Springs Plaza
(404) 255-3917
6297 Roswell Rd NE
Atlanta, GA
Wolf Camera
(770) 968-3857
2332 Southlake Mall
Morrow, GA
Wolf Camera One Hour Photo
(770) 419-0410
50 Ernest Barrett Pkwy
Marietta, GA

Software Learns to Tag Photos

provided by: 


U.S. researchers have released a new online program for automatically tagging images according to their content. In its first real-world test, the program processed thousands of publicly accessible images available on the photo-sharing site Flickr. At least one accurate tag was generated for 98 percent of all the pictures analysed.

The new software, called ALIPR (Automatic Linguistic Indexing of Pictures), uses a combination of statistical techniques to process an image and assign it a batch of 15 words, arranged in order of perceived relevance. These words may refer to a specific object within the picture, such as a "person" or "car," or to a more general theme, such as "outdoors" or "manmade."

For humans, deciphering an image is deceptively simple. And yet for computers, which can sort through millions of text documents with blistering speed and accuracy, identifying the content of an image remains a devilishly difficult task.

"Recognizing what an image is about semantically is one of the most difficult problems in AI," says Jia Li, a mathematician at Pennsylvania State University, in State College, who created the software with colleague James Wang, a member of the College of Information Sciences and Technology. "Objects in the real world are 3-D," Li explains. "When showing up in an image, they can vary vastly in color, shape, gesture, size, and position, and a computer usually has no prior knowledge about the variations."

Because a complex understanding of the world remains beyond the ability of computers, more-efficient vision-processing algorithms are needed to help them mimic human vision and intelligence.

ALIPR analyses an image pixel by pixel and applies a novel statistical method to calculate the probability that a particular word may describe its content. This involves examining the distribution of color and texture within the image and comparing these features with a stored database of words and images. Li and Wang trained their program using a commercial database containing around 50,000 images that had already been tagged.

Recently, they tested ALIPR on 5,411 previously unseen images available on the popular picture-sharing site Flickr. For 51 percent of these images, the first word generated by ALIPR appeared in users' tags. The program also produced at least one accurate word 98 percent of the time. The researchers employed images made publicly accessible by Flickr users, which were also openly accessible through Flickr's own Application Programming Interface.

By James Lee

Read article at techreview.com

Featured Local Company

Create Web Development Studios

Get an Amazing Web Site Now!!!

904-705-7381
1735 Seminole Road
Atlantic Beach, FL
http://www.createwds.com

Create Web Development Studios is a full service web site design and development company based out of Jacksonville Beach Florida.

Click here for a free one hour discovery session!
See how amazing your site can be...

Rate Article
     
Articles Insider

Rss   Delicious   Digg   Add To My Yahoo   Add To My Google   Bookmark   Search Plugin

Topics:
Advertising Engineering Home Services Retail & Consumer Services
Business Services Entertainment Industrial Goods & Services Software
Career Family Insurance Technology
Cars Financial Services Internet Telecommunications
Computer Hardware Food & Beverage Legal Transportation & Logistics
Construction Health Pets Travel
Education Home Electronics Real Estate Wedding