Content-Based Image Retrieval at the End of the Early Years
IEEE Transactions on Pattern Analysis and Machine Intelligence
The Cathedral and the Bazaar
Studying cooperation and conflict between authors with history flow visualizations
Proceedings of the SIGCHI Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems
TRECVID: evaluating the effectiveness of information retrieval tasks on digital video
Proceedings of the 12th annual ACM international conference on Multimedia
Reading movies: an integrated DVD player for browsing movies and their scripts
Proceedings of the 12th annual ACM international conference on Multimedia
Addressing the challenge of visual information access from digital image and video libraries
Proceedings of the 5th ACM/IEEE-CS joint conference on Digital libraries
The Wealth of Networks: How Social Production Transforms Markets and Freedom
The Wealth of Networks: How Social Production Transforms Markets and Freedom
Indexing of fictional video content for event detection and summarisation
Journal on Image and Video Processing
The evolution of visual information retrieval
Journal of Information Science
Financial incentives and the "performance of crowds"
Proceedings of the ACM SIGKDD Workshop on Human Computation
Are Visual Informatics Actually Useful in Practice: A Study in a Film Studies Context
IVIC '09 Proceedings of the 1st International Visual Informatics Conference on Visual Informatics: Bridging Research and Practice
Detection and representation of scenes in videos
IEEE Transactions on Multimedia
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In this paper we describe a project that explores how advances in information technology could be used to make film and television media more accessible to both scholarly and non-scholarly audiences. By indexing, at a detailed level, a range of time-synchronized and non-time-synchronized elements in a test collection of 12 films and 8 television programs, we demonstrate how structured data representing many aspects of media content can be produced in a streamlined manner, and discuss how this work could potentially be augmented with automated indexing to be more efficient. We present examples of how this data can be utilized to produce a variety of tools and artifacts that make film and television media more accessible, and suggest that crowdsourcing could be an effective strategy for accomplishing this work on a larger scale. This research contributes to the growing body of literature exploring how multimedia collections can be made more accessible and useful for a variety of purposes.