Abstract

Recent Large-Scale Multimedia Retrieval (LSMR) methods seem to heavily rely on analysing a large amount of data using high-performance machines. This paper aims to warn this research trend. We advocate that the above methods are useful only for recognising certain primitive meanings, knowledge about human interpretation is necessary to derive high-level meanings from primitive ones. We emphasise this by conducting a retrospective survey on machine-based methods which build classifiers based on features, and human-based methods which exploit user annotation and interaction. Our survey reveals that due to prioritising the generality and scalability for large-scale data, knowledge about human interpretation is left out by recent methods, while it was fully used in classical methods. Thus, we defend the importance of human-machine cooperation which incorporates the above knowledge into LSMR. In particular, we define its three future directions (cognition-based, ontology-based and adaptive learning) depending on types of knowledge, and suggest to explore each direction by considering its relation to the others.

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