18,485 research outputs found
Video Data Visualization System: Semantic Classification And Personalization
We present in this paper an intelligent video data visualization tool, based
on semantic classification, for retrieving and exploring a large scale corpus
of videos. Our work is based on semantic classification resulting from semantic
analysis of video. The obtained classes will be projected in the visualization
space. The graph is represented by nodes and edges, the nodes are the keyframes
of video documents and the edges are the relation between documents and the
classes of documents. Finally, we construct the user's profile, based on the
interaction with the system, to render the system more adequate to its
references.Comment: graphic
Talking With Scholars: Developing a Research Environment for Oral History Collections
Scholars are yet to make optimal use of Oral History collections. For the
uptake of digital research tools in the daily working practice of researchers,
practices and conventions commonly adhered to in the subfields in the
humanities should be taken into account during development. To this end, in the
Oral History Today project a research tool for exploring Oral History
collections is developed in close collaboration with scholarly researchers.
This paper describes four stages of scholarly research and the first steps
undertaken to incorporate requirements of these stages in a digital research
environment.Comment: Demo paper for The 2nd International Workshop on Supporting Users
Exploration of Digital Libraries (Malta, 26th September, 2013
Connecting the dots: a multi-pivot approach to data exploration
The purpose of data browsers is to help users identify and query data effectively without being overwhelmed by large complex graphs of data. A proposed solution to identify and query data in graph-based datasets is Pivoting (or set-oriented browsing), a many-to-many graph browsing technique that allows users to navigate the graph by starting from a set of instances followed by navigation through common links. Relying solely on navigation, however, makes it difficult for users to find paths or even see if the element of interest is in the graph when the points of interest may be many vertices apart. Further challenges include finding paths which require combinations of forward and backward links in order to make the necessary connections which further adds to the complexity of pivoting. In order to mitigate the effects of these problems and enhance the strengths of pivoting we present a multi-pivot approach which we embodied in tool called Visor. Visor allows users to explore from multiple points in the graph, helping users connect key points of interest in the graph on the conceptual level, visually occluding the remainder parts of the graph, thus helping create a road-map for navigation. We carried out an user study to demonstrate the viability of our approach
Ordinary Search Engine Users Carrying Out Complex Search Tasks
Web search engines have become the dominant tools for finding information on
the Internet. Due to their popularity, users apply them to a wide range of
search needs, from simple look-ups to rather complex information tasks. This
paper presents the results of a study to investigate the characteristics of
these complex information needs in the context of Web search engines. The aim
of the study is to find out more about (1) what makes complex search tasks
distinct from simple tasks and if it is possible to find simple measures for
describing their complexity, (2) if search success for a task can be predicted
by means of unique measures, and (3) if successful searchers show a different
behavior than unsuccessful ones. The study includes 60 people who carried out a
set of 12 search tasks with current commercial search engines. Their behavior
was logged with the Search-Logger tool. The results confirm that complex tasks
show significantly different characteristics than simple tasks. Yet it seems to
be difficult to distinguish successful from unsuccessful search behaviors. Good
searchers can be differentiated from bad searchers by means of measurable
parameters. The implications of these findings for search engine vendors are
discussed.Comment: 60 page
Exploring the usage of a video application tool: Experiences in film studies
This paper explores our experiences in deploying a video application tool in film studies, and its evaluation in terms of realistic contextual end-users who have real tasks to perform in a real environment. We demonstrate our experiences and core lesson learnt in deploying our novel movie browser application with undergraduate and graduate students completing a Film Studies course in Dublin City University over a semester. We developed a system called MOVIEBROWSER2 that has two types of browsing modes: Advanced and Basic. In general, students found that the features we provided were beneficial for their studies. Some issues or mismatches arose during the trial. A ‘wish-list’ was drawn up that might be useful for the future system developer. The contribution and achievements reported in this article are on the demonstration and exploration of how advances in technology can be deployed, and media can be accessed in the context of a real user community. Exploring the usage indicates a positive acceptance among students, besides lessons learned that are important for further investigation
Recent Developments in Cultural Heritage Image Databases: Directions for User-Centered Design
published or submitted for publicatio
Video browsing interfaces and applications: a review
We present a comprehensive review of the state of the art in video browsing and retrieval systems, with special emphasis on interfaces and applications. There has been a significant increase in activity (e.g., storage, retrieval, and sharing) employing video data in the past decade, both for personal and professional use. The ever-growing amount of video content available for human consumption and the inherent characteristics of video data—which, if presented in its raw format, is rather unwieldy and costly—have become driving forces for the development of more effective solutions to present video contents and allow rich user interaction. As a result, there are many contemporary research efforts toward developing better video browsing solutions, which we summarize. We review more than 40 different video browsing and retrieval interfaces and classify them into three groups: applications that use video-player-like interaction, video retrieval applications, and browsing solutions based on video surrogates. For each category, we present a summary of existing work, highlight the technical aspects of each solution, and compare them against each other
Tangos: the agile numerical galaxy organization system
We present Tangos, a Python framework and web interface for database-driven
analysis of numerical structure formation simulations. To understand the role
that such a tool can play, consider constructing a history for the absolute
magnitude of each galaxy within a simulation. The magnitudes must first be
calculated for all halos at all timesteps and then linked using a merger tree;
folding the required information into a final analysis can entail significant
effort. Tangos is a generic solution to this information organization problem,
aiming to free users from the details of data management. At the querying
stage, our example of gathering properties over history is reduced to a few
clicks or a simple, single-line Python command. The framework is highly
extensible; in particular, users are expected to define their own properties
which tangos will write into the database. A variety of parallelization options
are available and the raw simulation data can be read using existing libraries
such as pynbody or yt. Finally, tangos-based databases and analysis pipelines
can easily be shared with collaborators or the broader community to ensure
reproducibility. User documentation is provided separately.Comment: Clarified various points and further improved code performance;
accepted for publication in ApJS. Tutorials (including video) at
http://tiny.cc/tango
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