Probabilistic reasoning in intelligent systems: networks of plausible inference
Probabilistic reasoning in intelligent systems: networks of plausible inference
Learning Feature Relevance and Similarity Metrics in Image Databases
CBAIVL '98 Proceedings of the IEEE Workshop on Content - Based Access of Image and Video Libraries
PicHunter: Bayesian Relevance Feedback for Image Retrieval
ICPR '96 Proceedings of the International Conference on Pattern Recognition (ICPR '96) Volume III-Volume 7276 - Volume 7276
Relevance feedback: a power tool for interactive content-based image retrieval
IEEE Transactions on Circuits and Systems for Video Technology
The Truth about Corel - Evaluation in Image Retrieval
CIVR '02 Proceedings of the International Conference on Image and Video Retrieval
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The ability to learn from user interaction is an important asset for content-based image retrieval (CBIR) systems. Over short times scales, it enables the integration of information from successive queries assuring faster convergence to the desired target images. Over long time scales (retrieval sessions) it allows the retrieval system to tailor itself to the preferences of particular users. We address the issue of learning by formulating retrieval as a problem of Bayesian inference. The new formulation is shown to have various advantages over previous approaches: it leads to the minimization of the probability of retrieval error, enables region-based queries without prior image segmentation, and suggests elegant procedures for combining multiple user specifications. As a consequence of all this, it enables the design of short and long-term learning mechanisms that are simple, intuitive, and extremely efficient in terms of computational and storage requirements. We introduce two such algorithms and present experimental evidence illustrating the clear advantages of learning for CBIR.