DocumentCode
2823126
Title
Can Automatic Speech Transcripts Be Used for Large Scale TV Stream Description and Structuring?
Author
Guinaudeau, Camille ; Gravier, Guillaume ; Sebillot, P.
Author_Institution
IRISA/INRIA, Rennes, France
fYear
2009
fDate
14-16 Dec. 2009
Firstpage
489
Lastpage
494
Abstract
The increasing quantity of TV material requires methods to help users navigate such data streams. Automatically associating a short textual description to each program in a stream, is a first stage to navigating or structuring tasks. Speech contained in TV broadcasts---accessible by means of automatic speech recognition systems in the absence of closed caption---is a highly valuable semantic clue that might be used to link existing textual description such as program guides, with video segments corresponding to program. However, high word error rates are to be expected on some programs, likely to jeopardize the usefulness of transcripts. The goal of this article is to determine to what extent automatic transcripts of TV streams, for various types of programs, can be used for structuring or navigating tasks. To this end, word-based and phonetic-based automatic association between video segments and program descriptions is used as a case study. We show that descriptions from a program guide can be associated with video segments with an accuracy of up to 65% and provide a valuable description to validate existing program labels. Such associations constitute a first stage for structuring task as they enable video segment textual characterization.
Keywords
multimedia communication; speech recognition; television broadcasting; video signal processing; TV stream description; TV stream structuring; automatic speech recognition systems; automatic speech transcripts; high word error rates; program descriptions; video segment textual characterization; Automatic speech recognition; Error analysis; Histograms; Image segmentation; Large-scale systems; Layout; Multimedia communication; Navigation; Streaming media; TV broadcasting; TV stream structuring; automatic speech recognition; semantic content description;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Multimedia, 2009. ISM '09. 11th IEEE International Symposium on
Conference_Location
San Diego, CA
Print_ISBN
978-1-4244-5231-6
Electronic_ISBN
978-0-7695-3890-7
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/ISM.2009.80
Filename
5363698
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