n this paper, we argue to learn dissimilarity for interactive search in content based image retrieval. In literature, dissimilarity is often learned via the feature space by feature selection, feature weighting or by adjusting the parameters of a function of the features. Other than existing techniques, we use feedback to adjust the dissimilarity space independent of feature space. This has the great advantage that it manipulates dissimilarity directly. To create a dissimilarity space, we use the method proposed by Pekalska and Duin, selecting a set of images called prototypes and computing distances to those prototypes for all images in the collection. After the user gives feedback, we apply active learning with a one-class support vector machine to decide the movement of images such that relevant images stay close together while irrelevant ones are pushed away (the work of Guo ). The dissimilarity space is then adjusted accordingly. Results on a Corel dataset of 10000 images and a TrecVid collection of 43907 keyframes show that our proposed approach is not only intuitive, it also significantly improves the retrieval performance
@Article{NguyenITM2007,
author = "Nguyen, G. P. and Worring, M. and Smeulders, A. W. M.",
title = "Interactive Search by Direct Manipulation of Dissimilarity Space",
journal = "IEEE Transactions on Multimedia",
number = "7",
volume = "9",
pages = "1404--1415",
year = "2007",
url = "https://ivi.fnwi.uva.nl/isis/publications/2007/NguyenITM2007",
pdf = "https://ivi.fnwi.uva.nl/isis/publications/2007/NguyenITM2007/NguyenITM2007.pdf",
has_image = 1
}