Introduction to Modern Information Retrieval
Introduction to Modern Information Retrieval
The Shazam music recognition service
Communications of the ACM - Music information retrieval
HT06, tagging paper, taxonomy, Flickr, academic article, to read
Proceedings of the seventeenth conference on Hypertext and hypermedia
Social navigation in web lectures
Proceedings of the seventeenth conference on Hypertext and hypermedia
Generating summaries and visualization for large collections of geo-referenced photographs
MIR '06 Proceedings of the 8th ACM international workshop on Multimedia information retrieval
Proceedings of the SIGCHI Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems
Watch what I watch: using community activity to understand content
Proceedings of the international workshop on Workshop on multimedia information retrieval
I tube, you tube, everybody tubes: analyzing the world's largest user generated content video system
Proceedings of the 7th ACM SIGCOMM conference on Internet measurement
Honest Signals: How They Shape Our World
Honest Signals: How They Shape Our World
MM '08 Proceedings of the 16th ACM international conference on Multimedia
Less talk, more rock: automated organization of community-contributed collections of concert videos
Proceedings of the 18th international conference on World wide web
Proceedings of the 18th international conference on World wide web
Fragment, tag, enrich, and send: Enhancing social sharing of video
ACM Transactions on Multimedia Computing, Communications, and Applications (TOMCCAP)
Tweet the debates: understanding community annotation of uncollected sources
WSM '09 Proceedings of the first SIGMM workshop on Social media
TuVista: meeting the multimedia needs of mobile sports fans
MM '09 Proceedings of the 17th ACM international conference on Multimedia
NUS-WIDE: a real-world web image database from National University of Singapore
Proceedings of the ACM International Conference on Image and Video Retrieval
Peaks and persistence: modeling the shape of microblog conversations
Proceedings of the ACM 2011 conference on Computer supported cooperative work
Twitinfo: aggregating and visualizing microblogs for event exploration
Proceedings of the SIGCHI Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems
Knowing funny: genre perception and categorization in social video sharing
Proceedings of the SIGCHI Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems
SocialSkip: pragmatic understanding within web video
Proceddings of the 9th international interactive conference on Interactive television
Visual memes in social media: tracking real-world news in YouTube videos
MM '11 Proceedings of the 19th ACM international conference on Multimedia
MM '11 Proceedings of the 19th ACM international conference on Multimedia
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New multimedia applications, such as community-created video repositories and tools for synchronous sharing, have revolutionized the ways that media is watched and shared. Effective instrumentation of these applications can enable researchers and system designers to better understand how video is being consumed: that is, how it is being watched, shared, augmented with annotations and otherwise experienced by individuals, by groups, and crowds. In addition to consuming content, however, people also talk about it. Conversational exchanges around video content can take place within applications (e.g., in chat spaces) and/or using separate communication channels (e.g., microblogs). We propose that the actions of these video viewers, with the video object itself and/or with each other around the video object, provide rich data for understanding the semantics and social relevance of various pieces of video content. We illustrate this approach with current research and a novel taxonomy of social multimedia interaction.