Summary: | Digital video is among the most information-intensive modes of communication. The retrieval of video from digital libraries, along with sound and text, is a major challenge for the computing community in general and for the artificial intelligence community specifically. The advent of digital video has set some old questions in a new light. Questions relating to aesthetics and to the role of surrogates - image for reality and text for image, invariably touch upon the link between vision and language. Dealing with this link computationally is important for the artificial intelligence enterprise. Interesting images to consider both aesthetically and for research in video retrieval include those which are constrained and patterned, and which convey rich meanings; for example, dance. These are specialist images for us and require a special language for description and interpretation. Furthermore, they require specialist knowledge to be understood since there is usually more than meets the untrained eye: this knowledge may also be articulated in the language of the specialism. In order to be retrieved effectively and efficiently, video has to be annotated-, particularly so for specialist moving images. Annotation involves attaching keywords from the specialism along with, for us, commentaries produced by experts, including those written and spoken specifically for annotation and those obtained from a corpus of extant texts. A system that processes such collateral text for video annotation should perhaps be grounded in an understanding of the link between vision and language. This thesis attempts to synthesise ideas from artificial intelligence, multimedia systems, linguistics, cognitive psychology and aesthetics. The link between vision and language is explored by focusing on moving images of dance and the special language used to describe and interpret them. We have developed an object-oriented system, KAB, which helps to annotate a digital video library with a collateral corpus of texts and terminology. User evaluation has been encouraging. The system is now available on the WWW.
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