2 research outputs found
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A framework for inclusive digital storytelling for cultural tourism in Thailand
This thesis was submitted for the award of Doctor of Philosophy and was awarded by Brunel University LondonThailand has been extremely successful in promoting itself as a cultural country, with tourism being the country’s primary source of income. However, cultural tourism for Thai people is considered to be a niche market, and little attention has been paid to the topic, compared to mass tourism. Moreover, Thai visitors have little motivation to visit actual historical sites and read the story displayed as part of exhibitions. This
research aims to create, detail and evaluate a framework for inclusive digital storytelling to increase diversity and motivation for cultural tourism in Thailand.To broaden and increase the potential tourism market, this PhD research applies inclusive design principles as ‘understanding and designing for diversity’ by
identifying potential Thai customers into five diverse groups (youth, older adults, disabled people, non-cultural tourists, and cultural tourists), and presents reports regarding the barriers and drivers for achieving this. To increase the motivation of Thai tourists, this PhD research adopts digital storytelling as ‘the guideline for creating storytelling’ to increase motivation among the five diverse groups, and
illustrates how this was done in the second study. However, an issue arises if Thai people (particularly older adults and disabled people) cannot access or understand how to use this type of digital technology. These problems can in turn create opportunities for applying inclusive designs to digital technology in an effort to
understand users’ behavioural needs; this is presented in the third study. Finally, the fourth study evaluates the framework detailed from the previous three studies in order to answer the primary research question: “How could inclusive design and digital storytelling principles be applied to facilitate cultural tourism in Thailand?” This PhD research can suggest and establish links between three key areas and devise and detail a new framework to increase diversity and motivation for cultural tourism for Thai visitors in Thailand which is original and interdisciplinary.Office of the Higher Education Commission, Thailan
Contextual geospatial picture understanding, management and visualization
Summarization: We describe SPIM (Spatial Image Management), a framework and a system that allow identification and visualization of the semantics of distant objects in nature, which exist in a picture taken by a mobile device. Semantic objects in nature are represented on 3D maps and tagged with semantic and spatial descriptors. The system functionality creates a layer on top of pictures that allows semantic user browsing in augmented geospatial images, semantic object identification in pictures, object interaction, contextual map visualization, and interlinking of information in digital libraries and the web. We present requirements of semantic geospatial descriptions, system functionality, matching algorithms and experimental results.Παρουσιάστηκε στο: 11th International Conference on Advances in Mobile Computing and Multimedi