mscg 2012 - Special issue on "Multimedia Semantics Analysis via Crowdsourcing Geocontext"
Topics/Call fo Papers
Advances in Multimedia Journal, Hindawi
Special issue on "Multimedia Semantics Analysis via Crowdsourcing Geocontext"
http://www.hindawi.com/journals/am/si/mscg/
Submission deadline: October 1, 2011
Publication Date April 1, 2012
Overview
In recent years, knowledge implicitly shared by crowds on the web has been extensively discovered to facilitate a wide variety of multimedia applications, such as multimedia information retrieval, recommendation, tagging, and object detection and recognition. As social networking websites (e.g., Facebook, Myspace) and photo/video sharing websites (e.g., Flickr, YouTube) are widely flourishing, researchers conduct social media analysis with rich contextual information such as image/video tags, user's tagging behaviors, multidisciplinary correlation, and viewer ratings. However, among much contextual information, relatively fewer studies have paid attention to seamlessly consider geographical information into social media analysis. By considering absolute/relative geographical locations of objects or users from regions with culture difference, semantics conveyed in multimedia may be more accurately explored or more appropriately presented.
The so-called geocontext generally includes information conveying geographical information, such as geo-tag, map, Google street-view data, GPS information, user's locations (in terms of GPS information, IP address, or the country/region/community a person comes from), and the relative position to a specific object. Utilizing such information in multimedia semantic analysis may benefit location-based multimedia services, object detection/recognition, location-aware augmented reality, media description/presentation with cultural/region difference, or many other exciting researches. In addition, as geocontext is actively or passively shared by users, ethical and privacy issues also arise in related studies.
Topics
This special issue seeks high quality and original research and review articles targeting multimedia semantic analysis based on geocontext shared on the web or collected from crowds. Manuscripts are solicited to address a wide range of social media analysis with geocontext. Potential topics include, but are not limited to:
Geo-aware social media tagging and annotation
Geo-aware multimedia information retrieval
Geo-aware object detection and recognition
Geo-aware multimedia visualization
Location-based multimedia services
Learning media semantics from geocontext
User behavior analysis and cultural/region difference
Knowledge discovery for web community
User interaction for geo-aware multimedia retrieval
Large geocontext corpora
Privacy and security in geocontext
Submission Procedures and Guidelines
Before submission authors should carefully read over the journal's Author Guidelines, which are located at http://www.hindawi.com/journals/am/guidelines/. Prospective authors should submit an electronic copy of their complete manuscript through the journal Manuscript Tracking System at http://mts.hindawi.com/ according to the following timetable:
Important Dates
Manuscript Due October 1, 2011
First Round of Reviews January 1, 2012
Publication Date April 1, 2012
Guest Editors
Wei-Ta Chu, National Chung Cheng University, Taiwan (wtchu-AT-cs.ccu.edu.tw)
Wen-Huang Cheng, Academia Sinica, Taiwan (whcheng-AT-citi.sinica.edu.tw)
Gamhewage Chaminda De Silva, The University of Tokyo, Japan (chamds-AT-hal.t.u-tokyo.ac.jp)
Dhiraj Joshi, Kodak Research Labs, USA (dhiraj.joshi-AT-kodak.com)
Special issue on "Multimedia Semantics Analysis via Crowdsourcing Geocontext"
http://www.hindawi.com/journals/am/si/mscg/
Submission deadline: October 1, 2011
Publication Date April 1, 2012
Overview
In recent years, knowledge implicitly shared by crowds on the web has been extensively discovered to facilitate a wide variety of multimedia applications, such as multimedia information retrieval, recommendation, tagging, and object detection and recognition. As social networking websites (e.g., Facebook, Myspace) and photo/video sharing websites (e.g., Flickr, YouTube) are widely flourishing, researchers conduct social media analysis with rich contextual information such as image/video tags, user's tagging behaviors, multidisciplinary correlation, and viewer ratings. However, among much contextual information, relatively fewer studies have paid attention to seamlessly consider geographical information into social media analysis. By considering absolute/relative geographical locations of objects or users from regions with culture difference, semantics conveyed in multimedia may be more accurately explored or more appropriately presented.
The so-called geocontext generally includes information conveying geographical information, such as geo-tag, map, Google street-view data, GPS information, user's locations (in terms of GPS information, IP address, or the country/region/community a person comes from), and the relative position to a specific object. Utilizing such information in multimedia semantic analysis may benefit location-based multimedia services, object detection/recognition, location-aware augmented reality, media description/presentation with cultural/region difference, or many other exciting researches. In addition, as geocontext is actively or passively shared by users, ethical and privacy issues also arise in related studies.
Topics
This special issue seeks high quality and original research and review articles targeting multimedia semantic analysis based on geocontext shared on the web or collected from crowds. Manuscripts are solicited to address a wide range of social media analysis with geocontext. Potential topics include, but are not limited to:
Geo-aware social media tagging and annotation
Geo-aware multimedia information retrieval
Geo-aware object detection and recognition
Geo-aware multimedia visualization
Location-based multimedia services
Learning media semantics from geocontext
User behavior analysis and cultural/region difference
Knowledge discovery for web community
User interaction for geo-aware multimedia retrieval
Large geocontext corpora
Privacy and security in geocontext
Submission Procedures and Guidelines
Before submission authors should carefully read over the journal's Author Guidelines, which are located at http://www.hindawi.com/journals/am/guidelines/. Prospective authors should submit an electronic copy of their complete manuscript through the journal Manuscript Tracking System at http://mts.hindawi.com/ according to the following timetable:
Important Dates
Manuscript Due October 1, 2011
First Round of Reviews January 1, 2012
Publication Date April 1, 2012
Guest Editors
Wei-Ta Chu, National Chung Cheng University, Taiwan (wtchu-AT-cs.ccu.edu.tw)
Wen-Huang Cheng, Academia Sinica, Taiwan (whcheng-AT-citi.sinica.edu.tw)
Gamhewage Chaminda De Silva, The University of Tokyo, Japan (chamds-AT-hal.t.u-tokyo.ac.jp)
Dhiraj Joshi, Kodak Research Labs, USA (dhiraj.joshi-AT-kodak.com)
Other CFPs
- THE 5th MULTI-DISCIPLINARY INTERNATIONAL WORKSHOP ON ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE MIWAI 2011
- Workshop on Social Informatics and Social COmputing - SISCO 2011
- The International Conference on Management of Emergent Digital EcoSystems
- The 2nd IEEE LCN Workshop on Smart Grid Networking Infrastructure (SGNI)
- The 5th International Workshop on Architectures, Services and Applications for the Next Generation Internet (WASA-NGI-V 2012)
Last modified: 2011-06-07 07:03:57