28,504 research outputs found
Extending the 5S Framework of Digital Libraries to support Complex Objects, Superimposed Information, and Content-Based Image Retrieval Services
Advanced services in digital libraries (DLs) have been developed and widely used to address the required capabilities of an assortment of systems as DLs expand into diverse application domains. These systems may require support for images (e.g., Content-Based Image Retrieval), Complex (information) Objects, and use of content at fine grain (e.g., Superimposed Information). Due to the lack of consensus on precise theoretical definitions for those services, implementation efforts often involve ad hoc development, leading to duplication and interoperability problems. This article presents a methodology to address those problems by extending a precisely specified minimal digital library (in the 5S framework) with formal definitions of aforementioned services. The theoretical extensions of digital library functionality presented here are reinforced with practical case studies as well as scenarios for the individual and integrative use of services to balance theory and practice. This methodology has implications that other advanced
services can be continuously integrated into our current extended framework whenever they are identified. The theoretical definitions and case study we present may impact future development efforts and a wide range of digital library researchers, designers, and developers
GeoNotes: A Location-based Information System for Public Spaces
The basic idea behind location-based information systems is to connect information pieces to positions in outdoor or indoor space. Through position technologies such as Global Positioning System (GPS), GSM positioning, Wireless LAN positioning o
Non-hierarchical Structures: How to Model and Index Overlaps?
Overlap is a common phenomenon seen when structural components of a digital
object are neither disjoint nor nested inside each other. Overlapping
components resist reduction to a structural hierarchy, and tree-based indexing
and query processing techniques cannot be used for them. Our solution to this
data modeling problem is TGSA (Tree-like Graph for Structural Annotations), a
novel extension of the XML data model for non-hierarchical structures. We
introduce an algorithm for constructing TGSA from annotated documents; the
algorithm can efficiently process non-hierarchical structures and is associated
with formal proofs, ensuring that transformation of the document to the data
model is valid. To enable high performance query analysis in large data
repositories, we further introduce an extension of XML pre-post indexing for
non-hierarchical structures, which can process both reachability and
overlapping relationships.Comment: The paper has been accepted at the Balisage 2014 conferenc
Methodological considerations concerning manual annotation of musical audio in function of algorithm development
In research on musical audio-mining, annotated music databases are needed which allow the development of computational tools that extract from the musical audiostream the kind of high-level content that users can deal with in Music Information Retrieval (MIR) contexts. The notion of musical content, and therefore the notion of annotation, is ill-defined, however, both in the syntactic and semantic sense. As a consequence, annotation has been approached from a variety of perspectives (but mainly linguistic-symbolic oriented), and a general methodology is lacking. This paper is a step towards the definition of a general framework for manual annotation of musical audio in function of a computational approach to musical audio-mining that is based on algorithms that learn from annotated data. 1
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