
Digital 3D reconstructed models A proposition for structuring visualisation workflows using semantic technologies for recommendations
Author(s) -
Stefanie Wefers,
Ashish Karmacharya,
Mieke Pfarr-Harfst,
Frank Boochs
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
studies in digital heritage
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 2574-1748
DOI - 10.14434/sdh.v1i2.23327
Subject(s) - workflow , computer science , ontology , cultural heritage , visualization , structuring , documentation , data science , object (grammar) , process (computing) , knowledge management , world wide web , data mining , artificial intelligence , database , archaeology , geography , philosophy , epistemology , finance , economics , programming language , operating system
It is common for cultural heritage applications to use spatial and/or spectral data for documentation, analysis and visualisation. Knowledge on data requirements coming from the cultural heritage application and technical alternatives to generate the required data based on object characteristics and other influencings factors paves the way for the optimal selection of a recording technology. It is a collaborative process requiring knowledge of experts from cultural heritage domains and technical domains. Currently, this knowledge is structured and stored in an ontology (so-called COSCHKR). It has the purpose to support CH experts not familiar with technologies through prescribing an optimal spatial or spectral recording strategy adapted to the physical characteristics of the cultural heritage object and the data requirements of the targeted CH application. The creation of digital 3D reconstructed models for analysis and visualisation purposes is getting more and more common within humanities disciplines. Therefore, an implementation of mechanisms involved in visualisation applications into this ontology would have huge benefits in creating a powerful recommendation solution. A structured view on such project workflows facilitates a rough match with the existing knowledge representation. Illustrating the overall structure of COSCHKR, this paper addresses and discusses challenges in structuring the processes of cultural heritage visualisation and implementing these into the ontology.