Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Multimedia Indexing and Dimensionality Reduction.

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "Multimedia Indexing and Dimensionality Reduction."— Presentation transcript:

1 Multimedia Indexing and Dimensionality Reduction

2 Multimedia Data Management The need to query and analyze vast amounts of multimedia data (i.e., images, sound tracks, video tracks) has increased in the recent years. Joint Research from Database Management, Computer Vision, Signal Processing and Pattern Recognition aims to solve problems related to multimedia data management.

3 Multimedia Data There are four major types of multimedia data: images, video sequences, sound tracks, and text. From the above, the easiest type to manage is text, since we can order, index, and search text using string management techniques, etc. Management of simple sounds is also possible by representing audio as signal sequences over different channels. Image retrieval has received a lot of attention in the last decade (CV and DBs). The main techniques can be extended and applied also for video retrieval.

4 Content-based Image Retrieval Images were traditionally managed by first annotating their contents and then using text-retrieval techniques to index them. However, with the increase of information in digital image format some drawbacks of this technique were revealed: Manual annotation requires vast amount of labor Different people may perceive differently the contents of an image; thus no objective keywords for search are defined A new research field was born in the 90’s: Content- based Image Retrieval aims at indexing and retrieving images based on their visual contents.

5 Feature Extraction The basis of Content-based Image Retrieval is to extract and index some visual features of the images. There are general features (e.g., color, texture, shape, etc.) and domain-specific features (e.g., objects contained in the image). Domain-specific feature extraction can vary with the application domain and is based on pattern recognition On the other hand, general features can be used independently from the image domain.

6 Color Features To represent the color of an image compactly, a color histogram is used. Colors are partitioned to k groups according to their similarity and the percentage of each group in the image is measured. Images are transformed to k-dimensional points and a distance metric (e.g., Euclidean distance) is used to measure the similarity between them. k-bins k-dimensional space

7 Using Transformations to Reduce Dimensionality In many cases the embedded dimensionality of a search problem is much lower than the actual dimensionality Some methods apply transformations on the data and approximate them with low-dimensional vectors The aim is to reduce dimensionality and at the same time maintain the data characteristics If d(a,b) is the distance between two objects a, b in real (high- dimensional) and d’(a’,b’) is their distance in the transformed low- dimensional space, we want d’(a’,b’)  d(a,b). d(a,b) d’(a’,b’)

8 Problem - Motivation Given a database of documents, find documents containing “data”, “retrieval” Applications: Web law + patent offices digital libraries information filtering

9 Types of queries: boolean (‘data’ AND ‘retrieval’ AND NOT...) additional features (‘data’ ADJACENT ‘retrieval’) keyword queries (‘data’, ‘retrieval’) How to search a large collection of documents? Problem - Motivation

10 Text – Inverted Files

11 Q: space overhead? Text – Inverted Files A: mainly, the postings lists

12 how to organize dictionary? stemming – Y/N? Keep only the root of each word ex. inverted, inversion  invert insertions? Text – Inverted Files

13 how to organize dictionary? B-tree, hashing, TRIEs, PATRICIA trees,... stemming – Y/N? insertions? Text – Inverted Files

14 postings list – more Zipf distr.: eg., rank-frequency plot of ‘Bible’ log(rank) log(freq) freq ~ 1/rank / ln(1.78V) Text – Inverted Files

15 postings lists Cutting+Pedersen (keep first 4 in B-tree leaves) how to allocate space: [Faloutsos+92] geometric progression compression (Elias codes) [Zobel+] – down to 2% overhead! Conclusions: needs space overhead (2%-300%), but it is the fastest Text – Inverted Files

16 Text - Detailed outline Text databases problem full text scanning inversion signature files (a.k.a. Bloom Filters) Vector model and clustering information filtering and LSI

17 Vector Space Model and Clustering Keyword (free-text) queries (vs Boolean) each document: -> vector (HOW?) each query: -> vector search for ‘similar’ vectors

18 Vector Space Model and Clustering main idea: each document is a vector of size d: d is the number of different terms in the database document...data... aaron zoo data d (= vocabulary size) ‘indexing’

19 Document Vectors Documents are represented as “bags of words” OR as vectors. A vector is like an array of floating points Has direction and magnitude Each vector holds a place for every term in the collection Therefore, most vectors are sparse

20 Document Vectors One location for each word. novagalaxy heath’wood filmroledietfur 10 5 3 5 10 10 8 7 9 10 5 10 10 9 10 5 7 9 6 10 2 8 7 5 1 3 ABCDEFGHIABCDEFGHI “Nova” occurs 10 times in text A “Galaxy” occurs 5 times in text A “Heat” occurs 3 times in text A (Blank means 0 occurrences.)

21 Document Vectors One location for each word. novagalaxy heath’wood filmroledietfur 10 5 3 5 10 10 8 7 9 10 5 10 10 9 10 5 7 9 6 10 2 8 7 5 1 3 ABCDEFGHIABCDEFGHI “Hollywood” occurs 7 times in text I “Film” occurs 5 times in text I “Diet” occurs 1 time in text I “Fur” occurs 3 times in text I

22 Document Vectors novagalaxy heath’wood filmroledietfur 10 5 3 5 10 10 8 7 9 10 5 10 10 9 10 5 7 9 6 10 2 8 7 5 1 3 ABCDEFGHIABCDEFGHI Document ids

23 We Can Plot the Vectors Star Diet Doc about astronomy Doc about movie stars Doc about mammal behavior

24 Assigning Weights to Terms Binary Weights Raw term frequency tf x idf Recall the Zipf distribution Want to weight terms highly if they are frequent in relevant documents … BUT infrequent in the collection as a whole

25 Binary Weights Only the presence (1) or absence (0) of a term is included in the vector

26 Raw Term Weights The frequency of occurrence for the term in each document is included in the vector

27 Assigning Weights tf x idf measure: term frequency (tf) inverse document frequency (idf) -- a way to deal with the problems of the Zipf distribution Goal: assign a tf * idf weight to each term in each document

28 tf x idf

29 Inverse Document Frequency IDF provides high values for rare words and low values for common words For a collection of 10000 documents

30 Similarity Measures for document vectors Simple matching (coordination level match) Dice’s Coefficient Jaccard’s Coefficient Cosine Coefficient Overlap Coefficient

31 tf x idf normalization Normalize the term weights (so longer documents are not unfairly given more weight) normalize usually means force all values to fall within a certain range, usually between 0 and 1, inclusive.

32 Vector space similarity (use the weights to compare the documents)

33 Computing Similarity Scores 1.0 0.8 0.6 0.8 0.4 0.60.41.00.2

34 Vector Space with Term Weights and Cosine Matching 1.0 0.8 0.6 0.4 0.2 0.80.60.40.201.0 D2D2 D1D1 Q Term B Term A D i =(d i1,w di1 ;d i2, w di2 ;…;d it, w dit ) Q =(q i1,w qi1 ;q i2, w qi2 ;…;q it, w qit ) Q = (0.4,0.8) D1=(0.8,0.3) D2=(0.2,0.7)

35 Text - Detailed outline Text databases problem full text scanning inversion signature files (a.k.a. Bloom Filters) Vector model and clustering information filtering and LSI

36 Information Filtering + LSI [Foltz+,’92] Goal: users specify interests (= keywords) system alerts them, on suitable news- documents Major contribution: LSI = Latent Semantic Indexing latent (‘hidden’) concepts

37 Information Filtering + LSI Main idea map each document into some ‘concepts’ map each term into some ‘concepts’ ‘Concept’:~ a set of terms, with weights, e.g. “data” (0.8), “system” (0.5), “retrieval” (0.6) -> DBMS_concept

38 Information Filtering + LSI Pictorially: term-document matrix (BEFORE)

39 Information Filtering + LSI Pictorially: concept-document matrix and...

40 Information Filtering + LSI... and concept-term matrix

41 Information Filtering + LSI Q: How to search, eg., for ‘system’?

42 Information Filtering + LSI A: find the corresponding concept(s); and the corresponding documents

43 Information Filtering + LSI A: find the corresponding concept(s); and the corresponding documents

44 Information Filtering + LSI Thus it works like an (automatically constructed) thesaurus: we may retrieve documents that DON’T have the term ‘system’, but they contain almost everything else (‘data’, ‘retrieval’)

45 SVD - Detailed outline Motivation Definition - properties Interpretation Complexity Case studies Additional properties

46 SVD - Motivation problem #1: text - LSI: find ‘concepts’ problem #2: compression / dim. reduction

47 SVD - Motivation problem #1: text - LSI: find ‘concepts’

48 SVD - Motivation problem #2: compress / reduce dimensionality

49 Problem - specs ~10**6 rows; ~10**3 columns; no updates; random access to any cell(s) ; small error: OK

50 SVD - Motivation

51

52 SVD - Definition A [n x m] = U [n x r]   r x r] (V [m x r] ) T A: n x m matrix (eg., n documents, m terms) U: n x r matrix (n documents, r concepts)  : r x r diagonal matrix (strength of each ‘concept’) (r : rank of the matrix) V: m x r matrix (m terms, r concepts)

53 SVD - Properties THEOREM [Press+92]: always possible to decompose matrix A into A = U  V T, where U,  V: unique (*) U, V: column orthonormal (ie., columns are unit vectors, orthogonal to each other) U T U = I; V T V = I (I: identity matrix)  : eigenvalues are positive, and sorted in decreasing order

54 SVD - Example A = U  V T - example: data inf. retrieval brain lung = CS MD xx

55 SVD - Example A = U  V T - example: data inf. retrieval brain lung = CS MD xx CS-concept MD-concept

56 SVD - Example A = U  V T - example: data inf. retrieval brain lung = CS MD xx CS-concept MD-concept doc-to-concept similarity matrix

57 SVD - Example A = U  V T - example: data inf. retrieval brain lung = CS MD xx ‘strength’ of CS-concept

58 SVD - Example A = U  V T - example: data inf. retrieval brain lung = CS MD xx term-to-concept similarity matrix CS-concept

59 SVD - Example A = U  V T - example: data inf. retrieval brain lung = CS MD xx term-to-concept similarity matrix CS-concept

60 SVD - Detailed outline Motivation Definition - properties Interpretation Complexity Case studies Additional properties

61 SVD - Interpretation #1 ‘documents’, ‘terms’ and ‘concepts’: U: document-to-concept similarity matrix V: term-to-concept sim. matrix  : its diagonal elements: ‘strength’ of each concept

62 SVD - Interpretation #2 best axis to project on: (‘best’ = min sum of squares of projection errors)

63 SVD - Motivation

64 SVD - interpretation #2 minimum RMS error SVD: gives best axis to project v1

65 SVD - Interpretation #2

66 A = U  V T - example: = xx v1

67 SVD - Interpretation #2 A = U  V T - example: = xx variance (‘spread’) on the v1 axis

68 SVD - Interpretation #2 A = U  V T - example: U  gives the coordinates of the points in the projection axis = xx

69 SVD - Interpretation #2 More details Q: how exactly is dim. reduction done? = xx

70 SVD - Interpretation #2 More details Q: how exactly is dim. reduction done? A: set the smallest eigenvalues to zero: = xx

71 SVD - Interpretation #2 ~ xx

72 ~ xx

73 ~ xx

74 ~

75 Equivalent: ‘spectral decomposition’ of the matrix: = xx

76 SVD - Interpretation #2 Equivalent: ‘spectral decomposition’ of the matrix: = xx u1u1 u2u2 1 2 v1v1 v2v2

77 SVD - Interpretation #2 Equivalent: ‘spectral decomposition’ of the matrix: =u1u1 1 vT1vT1 u2u2 2 vT2vT2 + +... n m

78 SVD - Interpretation #2 ‘spectral decomposition’ of the matrix: =u1u1 1 vT1vT1 u2u2 2 vT2vT2 + +... n m n x 1 1 x m r terms

79 SVD - Interpretation #2 approximation / dim. reduction: by keeping the first few terms (Q: how many?) =u1u1 1 vT1vT1 u2u2 2 vT2vT2 + +... n m assume: 1 >= 2 >=... To do the mapping you use V T X’ = V T X

80 SVD - Interpretation #2 A (heuristic - [Fukunaga]): keep 80-90% of ‘energy’ (= sum of squares of i ’s) =u1u1 1 vT1vT1 u2u2 2 vT2vT2 + +... n m assume: 1 >= 2 >=...

81 SVD - Interpretation #3 finds non-zero ‘blobs’ in a data matrix = xx

82 SVD - Interpretation #3 finds non-zero ‘blobs’ in a data matrix = xx

83 SVD - Interpretation #3 Drill: find the SVD, ‘by inspection’! Q: rank = ?? = xx??

84 SVD - Interpretation #3 A: rank = 2 (2 linearly independent rows/cols) = xx??

85 SVD - Interpretation #3 A: rank = 2 (2 linearly independent rows/cols) = xx orthogonal??

86 SVD - Interpretation #3 column vectors: are orthogonal - but not unit vectors: = xx 0 0 0 0 0 00 000

87 SVD - Interpretation #3 and the eigenvalues are: = xx 0 0 0 0 0 00 000

88 SVD - Interpretation #3 A: SVD properties: matrix product should give back matrix A matrix U should be column-orthonormal, i.e., columns should be unit vectors, orthogonal to each other ditto for matrix V matrix  should be diagonal, with positive values

89 SVD - Complexity O( n * m * m) or O( n * n * m) (whichever is less) less work, if we just want eigenvalues or if we want first k eigenvectors or if the matrix is sparse [Berry] Implemented: in any linear algebra package (LINPACK, matlab, Splus, mathematica...)

90 Optimality of SVD Def: The Frobenius norm of a n x m matrix M is (reminder) The rank of a matrix M is the number of independent rows (or columns) of M Let A=U  V T and A k = U k  k V k T (SVD approximation of A) A k is an nxm matrix, U k an nxk,  k kxk, and V k mxk Theorem: [Eckart and Young] Among all n x m matrices C of rank at most k, we have that:

91 Kleinberg’s Algorithm Main idea: In many cases, when you search the web using some terms, the most relevant pages may not contain this term (or contain the term only a few times) Harvard : www.harvard.eduwww.harvard.edu Search Engines: yahoo, google, altavista Authorities and hubs

92 Kleinberg’s algorithm Problem dfn: given the web and a query find the most ‘authoritative’ web pages for this query Step 0: find all pages containing the query terms (root set) Step 1: expand by one move forward and backward (base set)

93 Kleinberg’s algorithm Step 1: expand by one move forward and backward

94 Kleinberg’s algorithm on the resulting graph, give high score (= ‘authorities’) to nodes that many important nodes point to give high importance score (‘hubs’) to nodes that point to good ‘authorities’) hubsauthorities

95 Kleinberg’s algorithm observations recursive definition! each node (say, ‘i’-th node) has both an authoritativeness score a i and a hubness score h i

96 Kleinberg’s algorithm Let E be the set of edges and A be the adjacency matrix: the (i,j) is 1 if the edge from i to j exists Let h and a be [n x 1] vectors with the ‘hubness’ and ‘authoritativiness’ scores. Then:

97 Kleinberg’s algorithm Then: a i = h k + h l + h m that is a i = Sum (h j ) over all j that (j,i) edge exists or a = A T h k l m i

98 Kleinberg’s algorithm symmetrically, for the ‘hubness’: h i = a n + a p + a q that is h i = Sum (q j ) over all j that (i,j) edge exists or h = A a p n q i

99 Kleinberg’s algorithm In conclusion, we want vectors h and a such that: h = A a a = A T h Recall properties: C(2): A [n x m] v 1 [m x 1] = 1 u 1 [n x 1] C(3): u 1 T A = 1 v 1 T

100 Kleinberg’s algorithm In short, the solutions to h = A a a = A T h are the left- and right- eigenvectors of the adjacency matrix A. Starting from random a’ and iterating, we’ll eventually converge (Q: to which of all the eigenvectors? why?)

101 Kleinberg’s algorithm (Q: to which of all the eigenvectors? why?) A: to the ones of the strongest eigenvalue, because of property B(5): B(5): (A T A ) k v’ ~ (constant) v 1

102 Kleinberg’s algorithm - results Eg., for the query ‘java’: 0.328 www.gamelan.com 0.251 java.sun.com 0.190 www.digitalfocus.com (“the java developer”)

103 Kleinberg’s algorithm - discussion ‘authority’ score can be used to find ‘similar pages’ to page p closely related to ‘citation analysis’, social networs / ‘small world’ phenomena

104 google/page-rank algorithm closely related: The Web is a directed graph of connected nodes imagine a particle randomly moving along the edges (*) compute its steady-state probabilities. That gives the PageRank of each pages (the importance of this page) (*) with occasional random jumps

105 PageRank Definition Assume a page A and pages T1, T2, …, Tm that point to A. Let d is a damping factor. PR(A) the pagerank of A. C(A) the out-degree of A. Then:

106 google/page-rank algorithm Compute the PR of each page~identical problem: given a Markov Chain, compute the steady state probabilities p1... p5 1 2 3 4 5

107 Computing PageRank Iterative procedure Also, … navigate the web by randomly follow links or with prob p jump to a random page. Let A the adjacency matrix (n x n), d i out-degree of page i Prob(A i ->A j ) = pn -1 +(1-p)d i –1 A ij A’[i,j] = Prob(A i ->A j )

108 google/page-rank algorithm Let A’ be the transition matrix (= adjacency matrix, row-normalized : sum of each row = 1) 1 2 3 4 5 =

109 google/page-rank algorithm A p = p 1 2 3 4 5 =

110 google/page-rank algorithm A p = p thus, p is the eigenvector that corresponds to the highest eigenvalue (=1, since the matrix is row-normalized)

111 Kleinberg/google - conclusions SVD helps in graph analysis: hub/authority scores: strongest left- and right- eigenvectors of the adjacency matrix random walk on a graph: steady state probabilities are given by the strongest eigenvector of the transition matrix

112 Conclusions – so far SVD: a valuable tool given a document-term matrix, it finds ‘concepts’ (LSI)... and can reduce dimensionality (KL)

113 Conclusions cont’d... and can find fixed-points or steady- state probabilities (google/ Kleinberg/ Markov Chains)... and can solve optimally over- and under-constraint linear systems (least squares)

114 References Brin, S. and L. Page (1998). Anatomy of a Large-Scale Hypertextual Web Search Engine. 7th Intl World Wide Web Conf. J. Kleinberg. Authoritative sources in a hyperlinked environment. Proc. 9th ACM-SIAM Symposium on Discrete Algorithms, 1998.

115 Embeddings Given a metric distance matrix D, embed the objects in a k-dimensional vector space using a mapping F such that D(i,j) is close to D’(F(i),F(j)) Isometric mapping: exact preservation of distance Contractive mapping: D’(F(i),F(j)) <= D(i,j) d’ is some Lp measure

116 PCA Intuition: find the axis that shows the greatest variation, and project all points into this axis f1 e1 e2 f2

117 SVD: The mathematical formulation Normalize the dataset by moving the origin to the center of the dataset Find the eigenvectors of the data (or covariance) matrix These define the new space Sort the eigenvalues in “goodness” order f1 e1 e2 f2

118 SVD Cont’d Advantages: Optimal dimensionality reduction (for linear projections) Disadvantages: Computationally expensive… but can be improved with random sampling Sensitive to outliers and non-linearities

119 FastMap What if we have a finite metric space (X, d )? Faloutsos and Lin (1995) proposed FastMap as metric analogue to the KL-transform (PCA). Imagine that the points are in a Euclidean space. Select two pivot points x a and x b that are far apart. Compute a pseudo-projection of the remaining points along the “line” x a x b. “Project” the points to an orthogonal subspace and recurse.

120 Selecting the Pivot Points The pivot points should lie along the principal axes, and hence should be far apart. Select any point x 0. Let x 1 be the furthest from x 0. Let x 2 be the furthest from x 1. Return (x 1, x 2 ). x0x0 x2x2 x1x1

121 Pseudo-Projections Given pivots (x a, x b ), for any third point y, we use the law of cosines to determine the relation of y along x a x b. The pseudo-projection for y is This is first coordinate. xaxa xbxb y cycy d a,y d b,y d a,b

122 “Project to orthogonal plane” Given distances along x a x b we can compute distances within the “orthogonal hyperplane” using the Pythagorean theorem. Using d ’(.,.), recurse until k features chosen. xbxb xaxa y z y’ z’ d’ y’,z’ d y,z c z -c y

123 Random Projections Based on the Johnson-Lindenstrauss lemma: For: 0<  < 1/2, any (sufficiently large) set S of M points in R n k = O(  -2 lnM) There exists a linear map f:S  R k, such that (1-  ) D(S,T) < D(f(S),f(T)) < (1+  )D(S,T) for S,T in S Random projection is good with constant probability

124 Random Projection: Application Set k = O(  -2 lnM) Select k random n-dimensional vectors (an approach is to select k gaussian distributed vectors with variance 0 and mean value 1: N(1,0) ) Project the original points into the k vectors. The resulting k-dimensional space approximately preserves the distances with high probability

125 Random Projection A very useful technique, Especially when used in conjunction with another technique (for example SVD) Use Random projection to reduce the dimensionality from thousands to hundred, then apply SVD to reduce dimensionality farther


Download ppt "Multimedia Indexing and Dimensionality Reduction."

Similar presentations


Ads by Google