Bibtex:Maidi08a

Un article de Wiki-evr@.

(Différences entre les versions)
Version du 9 décembre 2008 à 10:49 (modifier)
Maidi (Discuter | Contributions)

← Différence précédente
Version du 12 avril 2010 à 18:22 (modifier) (défaire)
Maidi (Discuter | Contributions)

Différence suivante →
Ligne 8 : Ligne 8 :
address = {Limassol (Cyprus)}, address = {Limassol (Cyprus)},
month = {October 20-26}, month = {October 20-26},
 + abstract = {This article describes on-going developments of the VENUS European Project (Virtual ExploratioN of Underwater Sites,
 +http://www.venus-project.eu) over its first two years of activity. The VENUS project is a collaborative venture which aims to bring
 +together archaeological and scientific methodologies with technological tools for virtual exploration of deep underwater
 +archaeological sites. The breadth of results produced by the project allow us to give only an overview of the key issues here.
 +The techniques developed through the work of the project are firmly rooted in the requirements of the archaeologists involved. The
 +on-going relationship between archaeological requirements and technological solutions developed in response to them forms the core
 +of the project. In this article we will describe the evolution of both the archaeological methodologies and the technical solutions that
 +were developed to support them during the first mission of the project – at Pianosa Island, Italy in October 2006 - and in the
 +subsequent activity, including the second mission to Sesimbra, Portugal in October 2007, and the preparation of the third one, to
 +Marseille, France, at the end of 2008.
 +Realising the integration of the acoustic data stream with the optical data acquisition has formed a major component of the first two
 +years of the project. Acoustic sensors track the position of unmanned underwater vehicles, like ROVs and AUVs, while they collect
 +images during a site’s survey. The fusion of acoustic and navigation data provides the seed for the photogrammetric process,
 +recording cameras’ position and orientation in real time within the EXIF metadata of the images.
 +In response to archaeological requirements the representation of the data takes two distinct forms. The first being a traditional twodimensional
 +representation, conforming to the illustrative norms of archaeological cartography, providing a rich interface to the
 +extensive underlying archaeological datasets. The second representation is a three-dimensional visualization of the site. By using an
 +augmented reality system, we are able to make available for archaeological investigation complex datasets in the accepted,
 +traditional, two-dimensional form,as well as to produce three-dimensional interfaces which provide new insights on archaeological
 +data.
 +In order to represent the archaeological information, we consider a knowledge base consisting of application ontology and
 +observations. We constructed application ontology for underwater archaeological knowledge.
 +Throughout the course of data acquisition, processing and delivery, the project has addressed the need for long-term preservation and
 +access to the dataset. By identifying specific digital preservation requirements, the aim is to produce guidelines for the archiving of
 +material derived from future investigations.
 +The project will conclude with a final field mission near Marseille, France, utilising all the techniques developed to undertake a fully
 +automated diver-less survey of a deep-water wreckage site. The culmination of the project will realise the desire of archaeologists
 +and of the general public to make possible the interaction with an underwater site that is out of the physical reach of the common
 +diver.
 +},
} }
</bibtex> </bibtex>

Version du 12 avril 2010 à 18:22

F. Alcala,..., M.Maidi et al. - VENUS (Virtual ExploratioN of Underwater Sites), Two years of interdisciplinary

The 14th Virtual Systems and Multimedia Conference (VSMM 2008) pp. 250-258, Limassol (Cyprus), October 20-26, 2008
Bibtex Abstract