Comparative Analysis of Content-Based and Context-Based Similarity on Musical Data - Artificial Intelligence Applications and Innovations - Part II Access content directly
Conference Papers Year : 2011

Comparative Analysis of Content-Based and Context-Based Similarity on Musical Data

C. Boletsis
  • Function : Author
  • PersonId : 1014195
A. Gratsani
  • Function : Author
  • PersonId : 1014196
D. Chasanidou
  • Function : Author
  • PersonId : 1014197
I. Karydis
  • Function : Author
  • PersonId : 992354
K. Kermanidis
  • Function : Author
  • PersonId : 992337

Abstract

Similarity measurement between two musical pieces is a hard problem. Humans perceive such similarity by employing a large amount of contextually semantic information. Commonly used content-based me-thodologies rely on information that includes little or no semantic information, and thus are reaching a performance “upper bound”. Recent research pertaining to contextual information assigned as free-form text (tags) in social networking services has indicated tags to be highly effective in improving the accuracy of music similarity. In this paper, we perform a large scale (20k real music data) similarity measurement using mainstream content and context methodologies. In addition, we test the accuracy of the examined methodologies against not only objective metadata but real-life user listening data as well. Experimental results illustrate the conditionally substantial gains of the context-based methodologies and a not so close match these methods with the real user listening data similarity.
Fichier principal
Vignette du fichier
978-3-642-23960-1_22_Chapter.pdf (200.5 Ko) Télécharger le fichier
Origin : Files produced by the author(s)
Loading...

Dates and versions

hal-01571469 , version 1 (02-08-2017)

Licence

Attribution

Identifiers

Cite

C. Boletsis, A. Gratsani, D. Chasanidou, I. Karydis, K. Kermanidis. Comparative Analysis of Content-Based and Context-Based Similarity on Musical Data. 12th Engineering Applications of Neural Networks (EANN 2011) and 7th Artificial Intelligence Applications and Innovations (AIAI), Sep 2011, Corfu, Greece. pp.179-189, ⟨10.1007/978-3-642-23960-1_22⟩. ⟨hal-01571469⟩
48 View
64 Download

Altmetric

Share

Gmail Facebook X LinkedIn More