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Similarity of Color Images

by Markus Stricker, Markus Orengo , 1995
"... We describe two new color indexing techniques. The first one is a more robust version of the commonly used color histogram indexing. In the index we store the cumulative color histograms. The L 1 -, L 2 -, or L1 -distance between two cumulative color histograms can be used to define a similarity mea ..."
Abstract - Cited by 495 (2 self) - Add to MetaCart
We describe two new color indexing techniques. The first one is a more robust version of the commonly used color histogram indexing. In the index we store the cumulative color histograms. The L 1 -, L 2 -, or L1 -distance between two cumulative color histograms can be used to define a similarity

Automatic Retrieval and Clustering of Similar Words

by Dekang Lin , 1998
"... greatest challenges in natural language learning. We first define a word similarity measure based on the distributional pattern of words. The similarity measure allows us to construct a thesaurus using a parsed corpus. We then present a new evaluation methodology for the automatically constructed th ..."
Abstract - Cited by 943 (15 self) - Add to MetaCart
greatest challenges in natural language learning. We first define a word similarity measure based on the distributional pattern of words. The similarity measure allows us to construct a thesaurus using a parsed corpus. We then present a new evaluation methodology for the automatically constructed

Efficient similarity search in sequence databases

by Rakesh Agrawal, Christos Faloutsos, Arun Swami , 1994
"... We propose an indexing method for time sequences for processing similarity queries. We use the Discrete Fourier Transform (DFT) to map time sequences to the frequency domain, the crucial observation being that, for most sequences of practical interest, only the first few frequencies are strong. Anot ..."
Abstract - Cited by 515 (19 self) - Add to MetaCart
the sequences and e ciently answer similarity queries. We provide experimental results which show that our method is superior to search based on sequential scanning. Our experiments show that a few coefficients (1-3) are adequate to provide good performance. The performance gain of our method increases

Attention, similarity, and the identification-Categorization Relationship

by Robert M. Nosofsky , 1986
"... A unified quantitative approach to modeling subjects ' identification and categorization of multidimensional perceptual stimuli is proposed and tested. Two subjects identified and categorized the same set of perceptually confusable stimuli varying on separable dimensions. The identification dat ..."
Abstract - Cited by 690 (28 self) - Add to MetaCart
), assumes that subjects store category exemplars in memory. Classification decisions are based on the similarity of stimuli to the stored exemplars. It is assumed that the same multidimensional perceptual representation underlies performance in both the identification and Categorization paradigms. However

M-tree: An Efficient Access Method for Similarity Search in Metric Spaces

by Paolo Ciaccia, Marco Patella, Pavel Zezula , 1997
"... A new access meth d, called M-tree, is proposed to organize and search large data sets from a generic "metric space", i.e. whE4 object proximity is only defined by a distance function satisfyingth positivity, symmetry, and triangle inequality postulates. We detail algorith[ for insertion o ..."
Abstract - Cited by 663 (38 self) - Add to MetaCart
of objects and split management, whF h keep th M-tree always balanced - severalheralvFV split alternatives are considered and experimentally evaluated. Algorithd for similarity (range and k-nearest neigh bors) queries are also described. Results from extensive experimentationwith a prototype system

Analysis, Modeling and Generation of Self-Similar VBR Video Traffic

by Mark Garrett, Walter Willinger , 1994
"... We present a detailed statistical analysis of a 2-hour long empirical sample of VBR video. The sample was obtained by applying a simple intraframe video compression code to an action movie. The main findings of our analysis are (1) the tail behavior of the marginal bandwidth distribution can be accu ..."
Abstract - Cited by 548 (6 self) - Add to MetaCart
be accurately described using "heavy-tailed" distributions (e.g., Pareto); (2) the autocorrelation of the VBR video sequence decays hyperbolically (equivalent to long-range dependence) and can be modeled using self-similar processes. We combine our findings in a new (non-Markovian) source model

Self-Similarity Through High-Variability: Statistical Analysis of Ethernet LAN Traffic at the Source Level

by Walter Willinger, Murad S. Taqqu, Robert Sherman, Daniel V. Wilson - IEEE/ACM TRANSACTIONS ON NETWORKING , 1997
"... A number of recent empirical studies of traffic measurements from a variety of working packet networks have convincingly demonstrated that actual network traffic is self-similar or long-range dependent in nature (i.e., bursty over a wide range of time scales) -- in sharp contrast to commonly made tr ..."
Abstract - Cited by 743 (24 self) - Add to MetaCart
traffic modeling assumptions. In this paper, we provide a plausible physical explanation for the occurrence of self-similarity in LAN traffic. Our explanation is based on new convergence results for processes that exhibit high variability (i.e., infinite variance) and is supported by detailed statistical

Semantic Similarity in a Taxonomy: An Information-Based Measure and its Application to Problems of Ambiguity in Natural Language

by Philip Resnik , 1999
"... This article presents a measure of semantic similarityinanis-a taxonomy based on the notion of shared information content. Experimental evaluation against a benchmark set of human similarity judgments demonstrates that the measure performs better than the traditional edge-counting approach. The a ..."
Abstract - Cited by 609 (9 self) - Add to MetaCart
. The article presents algorithms that take advantage of taxonomic similarity in resolving syntactic and semantic ambiguity, along with experimental results demonstrating their e#ectiveness. 1. Introduction Evaluating semantic relatedness using network representations is a problem with a long history

Multimodal Similarity: Results

by unknown authors
"... Object properties are varied parametrically: 1. Macrogeometric smoothing averages out sharp edges in global shape 2. Microgeometric smoothing reduces bumpiness in local texture • Subjects explored the objects by touch alone, vision alone, or both • 10 subjects per modality condition • Stimuli were p ..."
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Object properties are varied parametrically: 1. Macrogeometric smoothing averages out sharp edges in global shape 2. Microgeometric smoothing reduces bumpiness in local texture • Subjects explored the objects by touch alone, vision alone, or both • 10 subjects per modality condition • Stimuli were presented for 3s and subtended 16° • Haptic exploratory procedure was contour-following TWK 2006 re nd er re nd er

Similarity Flooding: A Versatile Graph Matching Algorithm and Its Application to Schema Matching

by Sergey Melnik, Hector Garcia-molina, Erhard Rahm , 2002
"... Matching elements of two data schemas or two data instances plays a key role in data warehousing, e-business, or even biochemical applications. In this paper we present a matching algorithm based on a fixpoint computation that is usable across different scenarios. The algorithm takes two graphs (sch ..."
Abstract - Cited by 592 (12 self) - Add to MetaCart
(schemas, catalogs, or other data structures) as input, and produces as output a mapping between corresponding nodes of the graphs. Depending on the matching goal, a subset of the mapping is chosen using filters. After our algorithm runs, we expect a human to check and if necessary adjust the results. As a
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