This paper presents a prototype of a visual recognition system for a handheld interactive museum guide. Contextualized information about museum drawings may be obtained by the user, without any knowledge about how the system works by simply pointing a palmtop camera towards the painting and taking a shot. The system was tested and performance was found to be satisfactory in challenging environment conditions
This paper presents a new interaction technique - scan and tilt - aiming to enable a more natural in...
During a museum visit, social interaction can improve intellectual, social, personal and cultural de...
The most common technological device found in organisations of cultural heritage is a handheld guide...
This paper presents a prototype of a visual recognition system for a handheld interactive museum gui...
The provision of information encourages people to visit cultural sites more often. Exploiting the gr...
This paper presents an intuitive user interface (UI) for visitors in a museum to quickly locate an e...
The ability to identify the artworks that a museum visitor is looking at, using first-person images ...
International audienceThis article explores the feasibility of a market-ready, mobile pattern recogn...
In the past decades personalised content delivery has been only achieved through traditional audio-g...
Museums have long been facing the problem of providing appropriate and sufficient information about ...
This paper describes a Mixed Reality-supported interactive museum exhibit. Using an easy and intuiti...
Recently, several works have been proposed in the literature to take advantage of the diffusion of s...
In the recent years, advancement in mobile technology has produced an evolutionary device: known as ...
International audienceThis work focuses on the viability of using a cell-phone as mobile museum guid...
This dissertation may be made available for consultation within the Uni-versity Library and may be p...
This paper presents a new interaction technique - scan and tilt - aiming to enable a more natural in...
During a museum visit, social interaction can improve intellectual, social, personal and cultural de...
The most common technological device found in organisations of cultural heritage is a handheld guide...
This paper presents a prototype of a visual recognition system for a handheld interactive museum gui...
The provision of information encourages people to visit cultural sites more often. Exploiting the gr...
This paper presents an intuitive user interface (UI) for visitors in a museum to quickly locate an e...
The ability to identify the artworks that a museum visitor is looking at, using first-person images ...
International audienceThis article explores the feasibility of a market-ready, mobile pattern recogn...
In the past decades personalised content delivery has been only achieved through traditional audio-g...
Museums have long been facing the problem of providing appropriate and sufficient information about ...
This paper describes a Mixed Reality-supported interactive museum exhibit. Using an easy and intuiti...
Recently, several works have been proposed in the literature to take advantage of the diffusion of s...
In the recent years, advancement in mobile technology has produced an evolutionary device: known as ...
International audienceThis work focuses on the viability of using a cell-phone as mobile museum guid...
This dissertation may be made available for consultation within the Uni-versity Library and may be p...
This paper presents a new interaction technique - scan and tilt - aiming to enable a more natural in...
During a museum visit, social interaction can improve intellectual, social, personal and cultural de...
The most common technological device found in organisations of cultural heritage is a handheld guide...