Tom Krazit | Jun 24, 2009

Google's new landmark search research uses clustering techniques to match similar photos of famous landmarks, such as the Acropolis. (Click for larger image)
(Credit: Google)
Google thinks it has made a breakthrough in "computer vision."
Imagine stumbling upon a picture of a beautiful site in Europe filled with
ancient ruins, one you didn't recognize at first glance while searching for
vacation destinations online. Google has developed a way to let a person provide
Google with the URL for that image and search a database of over 40 million
geotagged photos to match that image to verified landmarks, giving you a destination for that next
trip.
The project is still very much in the research stage, said Jay Yagnik,
Google's head of computer vision research. The company plans to present a paper
Monday at the
Computer Vision and Pattern
Recognition Conference in Miami detailing its work in proving that large,
scattered sets of data can be used to make accurate assessments of individual
images.
"This is a fundamental advancement in how we look at computer vision," Yagnik
said.
To create the "landmark recognition engine", Google took advantage of the 40
million or so images in
Picasa and
Panoromio that were geotagged with the
locations of famous landmarks, like the Eiffel Tower. It also assembled images
from travel guide sites such as
Wikitravel as a base of landmark
photos that had been verified by experts.
With all that data as a backdrop, researchers figured out a way to find the
most representative pictures of a landmark using a clustering technique to group
images taken from similar perspectives, as well as toss out "noisy" images such
as a picture of your family on the street in front of the Eiffel Tower that
doesn't really show the landmark.
Then, when given a fresh image to analyze, the system uses pixel-matching
techniques to find small patterns within that image and look for similar
patterns within verified photos of landmarks. Google said it has been able to
return an accurate result 80 percent of the time, not only naming the landmark
but allowing it to supply additional information about the place.
Google is by no means certain when, or if, this research will turn into a
product. It is excited, however, that it has found a way to use computers to
process large sets of data available on the Internet and return accurate
information about images; doing this with text, of course, is what has made
Google Google.
Via
Crave CNET
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