YouTubeCat: Learning to Categorize Wild Web Videos

Abstract

Automatic categorization of videos in a Web-scale unconstrained collection such as YouTube is a challenging task. A key issue is how to build an effective training set in the presence of missing, sparse or noisy labels. We propose to achieve this by first manually creating a small labeled set and then extending it using additional sources such as related videos, searched videos, and text-based webpages. The data from such disparate sources has different properties and labeling quality, and thus fusing them in a coherent fashion is another practical challenge. We propose a fusion framework in which each data source is first combined with the manually-labeled set independently. Then, using the hierarchical taxonomy of the categories, a Conditional Random Field (CRF) based fusion strategy is designed. Based on the final fused classifier, category labels are predicted for the new videos. Extensive experiments on about 80K videos from 29 most frequent categories in YouTube show the effectiveness of the proposed method for categorizing large-scale wild Web videos1.

Cite

Text

Wang et al. "YouTubeCat: Learning to Categorize Wild Web Videos." IEEE/CVF Conference on Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition, 2010. doi:10.1109/CVPR.2010.5540125

Markdown

[Wang et al. "YouTubeCat: Learning to Categorize Wild Web Videos." IEEE/CVF Conference on Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition, 2010.](https://mlanthology.org/cvpr/2010/wang2010cvpr-youtubecat/) doi:10.1109/CVPR.2010.5540125

BibTeX

@inproceedings{wang2010cvpr-youtubecat,
  title     = {{YouTubeCat: Learning to Categorize Wild Web Videos}},
  author    = {Wang, Zheshen and Zhao, Ming and Song, Yang and Kumar, Sanjiv and Li, Baoxin},
  booktitle = {IEEE/CVF Conference on Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition},
  year      = {2010},
  pages     = {879-886},
  doi       = {10.1109/CVPR.2010.5540125},
  url       = {https://mlanthology.org/cvpr/2010/wang2010cvpr-youtubecat/}
}