Description
Visual processing in social media platforms is a key step in gathering and understanding information in the era of Internet and big data. Online data is rich in content, but its processing faces many challenges including: varying scales for objects of interest, unreliable and/or missing labels, the inadequacy of single modal data and difficulty in analyzing high dimensional data. Towards facilitating the processing and understanding of online data, this dissertation primarily focuses on three challenges that I feel are of great practical importance: handling scale differences in computer vision tasks, such as facial component detection and face retrieval, developing efficient classifiers using partially labeled data and noisy data, and employing multi-modal models and feature selection to improve multi-view data analysis. For the first challenge, I propose a scale-insensitive algorithm to expedite and accurately detect facial landmarks. For the second challenge, I propose two algorithms that can be used to learn from partially labeled data and noisy data respectively. For the third challenge, I propose a new framework that incorporates feature selection modules into LDA models.
Details
Title
- Towards Addressing Key Visual Processing Challenges in Social Media Computing
Contributors
- Zhou, Xu (Author)
- Li, Baoxin (Thesis advisor)
- Hsiao, Sharon (Committee member)
- Davulcu, Hasan (Committee member)
- Yang, Yezhou (Committee member)
- Arizona State University (Publisher)
Date Created
The date the item was original created (prior to any relationship with the ASU Digital Repositories.)
2018
Subjects
Resource Type
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Note
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Doctoral Dissertation Computer Science 2018