Publication Type
Journal Article
Version
acceptedVersion
Publication Date
3-2015
Abstract
Image reranking is an effective way for improving the retrieval performance of keyword-based image search engines. A fundamental issue underlying the success of existing image reranking approaches is the ability in identifying potentially useful recurrent patterns from the initial search results. Ideally, these patterns can be leveraged to upgrade the ranks of visually similar images, which are also likely to be relevant. The challenge, nevertheless, originates from the fact that keyword-based queries are used to be ambiguous, resulting in difficulty in predicting the search intention. Mining useful patterns without understanding query is risky, and may lead to incorrect judgment in reranking. This paper explores the use of click-through data, which can be viewed as the footprints of user searching behavior, as an effective means of understanding query, for providing the basis on identifying the recurrent patterns that are potentially helpful for reranking. A new reranking algorithm, named click-boosting multi-modality graph-based reranking, is proposed. The algorithm leverages clicked images to locate similar images that are not clicked, and reranks them in a multi-modality graph-based learning scheme. Encouraging results are reported for image reranking on a real-world image dataset collected from a commercial search engine with click-through data.
Keywords
Image search, Search reranking, Click-boosting, Multi-modality graph-based learning
Discipline
Data Storage Systems | Graphics and Human Computer Interfaces
Research Areas
Intelligent Systems and Optimization
Publication
Multimedia Systems
Volume
21
Issue
2
First Page
217
Last Page
227
ISSN
0942-4962
Identifier
10.1007/s00530-014-0379-8
Publisher
Springer Verlag (Germany)
Citation
1
Creative Commons License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-No Derivative Works 4.0 International License.