학술논문

Personalized Presentation and Navigation of Cultural Heritage Content
Document Type
Conference
Source
2005 IEEE International Conference on Multimedia and Expo Multimedia and Expo Multimedia and Expo, 2005. ICME 2005. IEEE International Conference on. :1589-1592 2005
Subject
Computing and Processing
Navigation
Cultural differences
Art
Visualization
Semantic Web
Mathematics
Computer science
Ontologies
Personal digital assistants
Joining processes
Language
ISSN
1945-7871
1945-788X
Abstract
The goal of the CHIP (Cultural Heritage Information Personalization) project is to provide personalized access to combined cultural heritage content. The driving case is given by the Rijksmuseum content presented on the museum web site and visitor guides. The CHIP project aims to extend and integrate existing technologies for semantic browsing and search (e.g. Topia1[1], Noadster[2], OntoAIMS), ontology-based user modeling (e.g. OWL-OLM2[3]), adaptation strategies (e.g. AHA! 3[4]) and presentation of structured information (e.g. Hera4[5]) in order to achieve its goals. We use as a starting point the Topia demonstrator, which provides search and browsing interface to 1250 semantically described Rijksmuseum artifacts. We extend further this research by involving semantic-aware adaptation strategies and semantic based reasoning user model elicitation to allow for effective personalization of the content navigation and presentation on various devices (e. g. web application, PDA, etc.). In this we integrate artifacts and background information that span over several collections and sources. Adaptive clustering mechanisms show the relations between art objects and links to background information, based on their metadata. Further, hypermedia formats support multi-branched story lines connecting art objects in “ precooked” or automatically generated ways.