MPEG-7


MPEG-7 is a multimedia content description standard. It was standardized in ISO/IEC 15938. This description will be associated with the content itself, to allow fast and efficient searching for material that is of interest to the user. MPEG-7 is formally called Multimedia Content Description Interface. Thus, it is not a standard which deals with the actual encoding of moving pictures and audio, like MPEG-1, MPEG-2 and MPEG-4. It uses XML to store metadata, and can be attached to timecode in order to tag particular events, or synchronise lyrics to a song, for example.
It was designed to standardize:
  • a set of Description Schemes and Descriptors
  • a language to specify these schemes, called the Description Definition Language
  • a scheme for coding the description
The combination of MPEG-4 and MPEG-7 has been sometimes referred to as MPEG-47.

Introduction

MPEG-7 is intended to complement the previous MPEG standards, by standardizing multimedia metadata -- information about the content, not the content itself. MPEG-7 can be used independently of the other MPEG standards - the description might even be attached to an analog movie. The representation that is defined within MPEG-4, i.e. the representation of audio-visual data in terms of objects, is however very well suited to what will be built on the MPEG-7 standard. This representation is basic to the process of categorization. In addition, MPEG-7 descriptions could be used to improve the functionality of previous MPEG standards. With these tools, we can build an MPEG-7 Description and deploy it. According to the requirements document,1 "a Description consists of a Description Scheme and the
set of Descriptor Values that
describe the Data." A Descriptor Value is "an instantiation of a Descriptor for a given data set."
The Descriptor is the syntactic and semantic definition of the content.
Extraction algorithms are inside the scope of the standard because their standardization is not required to allow interoperability.

Parts

The MPEG-7 consists of different Parts. Each part covers a certain aspect of the whole specification.
PartNumberFirst public release date Latest public release date Latest amendmentTitleDescription
Part 1200220022006Systemsthe architectural framework of MPEG-7, the carriage of MPEG-7 content - TeM and the binary format for MPEG-7 descriptions
Part 220022002Description definition language
Part 3200220022010Visual
Part 4200220022006Audio
Part 5200320032015Multimedia description schemes
Part 6200320032011Reference software
Part 7200320032011Conformance testing
Part 8200220022011Extraction and use of MPEG-7 descriptions
Part 9200520052012Profiles and levels
Part 1020052005Schema definition
Part 11200520052012MPEG-7 profile schemas
Part 1220082012Query format
Part 1320152015Compact descriptors for visual search

Relation between description and content

An MPEG-7 architecture requirement is that description must be separate from the audiovisual content.
On the other hand, there must be a relation between the content and description. Thus the description is multiplexed with the content itself.
On the right side you can see this relation between description and content.

MPEG-7 tools

MPEG-7 uses the following tools:Descriptor : It is a representation of a feature defined syntactically and semantically. It could be that a unique object was described by several descriptors.Description Schemes : Specify the structure and semantics of the relations between its components, these components can be descriptors or description schemes.Description Definition Language : It is based on XML language used to define the structural relations between descriptors. It allows the creation and modification of description schemes and also the creation of new descriptors.System tools: These tools deal with binarization, synchronization, transport and storage of descriptors. It also deals with Intellectual Property protection.
On the right side you can see the relation between MPEG-7 tools.

MPEG-7 applications

There are many applications and application domains which will benefit from the MPEG-7 standard. A few application examples are:

Limitations

The MPEG-7 standard was originally written in XML Schema, which constitutes semi-structured data. For example, the running time of a movie annotated using MPEG-7 in XML is machine-readable data, so software agents will know that the number expressing the running time is a positive integer, but such data is not machine-interpretable, because it does not convey semantics, known as the "Semantic Gap." To address this issue, there were many attempts to map the MPEG-7 XML Schema to the Web Ontology Language, which is a structured data equivalent of the terms of the MPEG-7 standard. However, these mappings did not really bridge the "Semantic Gap," because low-level video features alone are inadequate for representing video semantics. In other words, annotating an automatically extracted video feature, such as color distribution, does not provide the meaning of the actual visual content.

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