Abstract

Existing mobile photo crowdsensing approaches focus on the participant-to-server photo pre-selection, i.e., reducing the photo redundancy from participants to a server. The server may still receive plenty of photos for a target area. Yet, another important problem is to select a proper photo subset of an area from the server to a requester. This is a challenging problem because the selected subset with a small size should attain both coverage on the PoIs - Points of Interest (i.e., photo coverage of the area) and quality on the views (i.e., view quality). In this paper, we propose a novel and generic server-to-requester photo selection approach even when there are neither photo shooting direction information nor reference photos. A utility model is designed to measure photo merits of coverage and quality by exploiting photos' spatial distribution and visual representativeness. We present two photo selection schemes, basic and PoI number-aware, to maximize the photo selection utility with multiple levels of granularity. Experimental results on real-world datasets show that our basic scheme outperforms the baselines by an average of 33% and 18.7% on photo coverage and view quality, respectively. Our PoI number-aware scheme can yield an additionally 44.8 percent improvement on the photo coverage performance.

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