Chorus+ Activities

CHORUS+ objective is to coordinate national and international projects and initiatives in the Search-engine domain and to extend this Coordination in non-European countries.

CHORUS+ aims at creating the conditions of mutual information exchange and cross fertilisation between the FP7 projects in the search-engines domain and the recently launched national and international initiatives in this area. A particular emphasis on setting concrete R&D and industrial objectives for multimedia search in Europe is planned through the implementation of discussion groups limited to selected representatives (industry and academia) and the organisation of and open participation in workshops, conferences and summer schools.

  

At the business level, CHORUS+ aims to foster discussion and avoid fragmentation. The outcome of this discussion will address the interests, needs and challenges of technology producers, content owners and consumer

At the technology level, numerous initiatives on analysing, annotating, classifying or otherwise linking audio-visual content will take place with the final aim to ease navigation, access and use of virtually unlimited quantities of audio-visual content.

 

CHORUS+ believes that, in order to address the large variety of potential use cases and the great level of uncertainty regarding future success stories, the profusion of initiatives is beneficial and will trigger competition between projects leading to better results.  

The Chorus + factsheet can be downloaded here

 

Multimedia Search Technology Transfer driven by Benchmarking

Report from our TTK 5 - April 2012 - Now available

This Think-Tank brought together experts and stakeholders of multimedia search related benchmarking efforts in order to exchange on lessons learned and to assess suitability of benchmarking as a tool to foster exchange between academia and industry at the European level.
 

Notes taken during and following the Chorus+ Think-Tank roundtable discussion on "Multimedia search technology transfer driven by benchmarking” held during the WWW2012 a conference in Lyon (France) on April 19th 2012.

In particular the Think-Tank addressed the following subjects:

  •  Lessons learned: What works and what does not work in benchmarking?
  •  How efficient is benchmarking for fostering technology transfer?
  • What are the lessons learned on this subject?
  •  How efficient is benchmarking for evaluating scientific and technical progress?  
  • Which technologies should be targeted for future benchmarking campaigns?  
  • How effective are the existing public and private benchmarking efforts?
  • Should the EU play a role in further strengthening and supporting these efforts? 

The full report is available  here



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