Automatic image annotation Essays

  • Interaction Metadata from Multimodal Interactions

    1147 Words  | 3 Pages

    not have the motivation to do the daunting task of tagging and indexing these huge photo collections [2, 3, 4]. As Fleck M points out [5] that people do not see the usefulness of annotating and indexing of the photographs when they are adding new images to the collection. The real need only surfaces when they already have a massive indexed photo collection and the task of annotating the whole collection is no longer appealing enough. There has been a lot of work done in the area of making it easier

  • Image Saturation And Reflection Is The Process Of Image Retrieval

    6006 Words  | 13 Pages

    CHAPTER III COLOR DESCRIPTION AND EXTRACTION 3.1 INTRODUCTION Image retrieval is the process of handling large volume of image database in order to achieve the efficiency in identifying similar images over the retrieved results. In Image retrieval, a choice of various techniques is used to represent images for searching, indexing and retrieval with either supervised or unsupervised learning models. The color feature extraction process consists of two parts: grid based representative of color selection

  • Branding In Marketing Essay

    2042 Words  | 5 Pages

    expensive silver tableware. Smiths 'branded' their swords. The role of the brand is to identify products by the same way as for medieval farmers and for modern corporations as well. Every company seeks to create its own brand - a unique and effective image. Purpose of brand is attracting and retaining customers in its market share. Branding in marketing is a complex technology, aimed at making advantageous position a brand from the competition. Facilitating the search for the necessary goods to the buyer

  • the hell of 1984

    7763 Words  | 16 Pages

    The Hell of Nineteen Eighty-Four. ). Did Orwell realise quite what he had done in Nineteen Eighty-Four? His post-publication glosses on its meaning reveal either blankness or bad faith even about its contemporary political implications. He insisted, for example, that his 'recent novel [was] NOT intended as an attack on Socialism or on the British Labour Party (of which I am a supporter)'.(1) He may well not have intended it but that is what it can reasonably be taken to be. Warburg saw this immediately

  • The Effect of Electronic Journals on Scholarly Communication

    10795 Words  | 22 Pages

    The Effect of Electronic Journals on Scholarly Communication In recent years, scholarly communication has virtually exploded into the on-line electronic world. This has brought a number of demonstrable benefits to the scholarly communication process as well as highlighting a number of inefficiencies and obstacles to the full deployment of information technology. However, the explosion has also brought a spate of credulous accounts concerning the transformative potential of information technology