143 research outputs found
Multimedia Standards
The aim of this paper is to review some of the standards, connected
with multimedia and their metadata. We start with MPEG family. MPEG-21
provides an open framework for multimedia delivery and consumption. MPEG-
7 is a multimedia content description standard. With the Internet grow several
format were proposed for media scenes description. Some of them are open
standards such as: VRML1, X3D2, SMIL3, SVG4, MPEG-4 BIFS, MPEG-4,
XMT, MPEG-4, LaSER, COLLADA5, published by ISO, W3C, etc. Television
has become the most important mass medium. Standards such as MHEG,
DAVIC, Java TV, MHP, GEM, OCAP and ACAP have been developed.
Efficient video-streaming is presented. There exist a large number of standards
for representing audiovisual metadata. We cover the Material Exchange Format
(MXF), the Digital Picture Exchange (DPX), and the Digital Cinema Package
(DCP)
Preface
In recent years, the research community has demonstrated considerable
interest in Digital Culture (DC) and its online presentation, accessibility,
exploitation, preservation and reuse through new tools and services to model,
analyse and visualize vast amounts of DC data. The focus is on the search of
innovations especially in areas/subareas relevant to data management and
processing—innovative and creative tools for approaching cultural assets,
applications and services for better access to and exploiting of the rich and
diverse digital cultural heritage in a sustainable way, intelligent curation,
creative use/re-use and remix, reinterpretation, study, understanding, analysis,
personalization, adaptation, semantics, protection, restoration, preservation,
etc. The research community deals with important issues of handling data
directly, affecting the economy (represented by the creative and re-creative
industry), the public sector (cultural institutions—museums, libraries, galleries,
etc.), education, and society as a whole.
This special issue of Serdica Journal of Computing aims to contribute
to a deeper understanding of DC
The Third National Information Day: Open Access to Scientific Information
The paper presents in brief the “Open Access Infrastructure for Research in Europe” project and what is done in Bulgaria in the area of open access to scientific information
Culture Heritage Digital Repositories. Research Questions
This discussion is about innovative solutions for assembling multimedia digital repositories for collaborative use in specific contexts and communities and enhancing scholarly understanding and experiences of digital cultural heritage. Several aspects are stress such as the dynamic aggregation of cross-media resources across existing institutional digital libraries and repositories. Research questions about the scalability, interoperability and distributed architectures, aggregation, and semantic search tools are addressed
Business Models for Open Access. Copyright and Licensing under Open Access
The lecture analyses the traditional business model in scientific communication and describes the new emerging models in the context of Open Access. Copyright and licensing part provides an overview of the legal issues and copyright at the heart of Open Access.The autumn training school Development and Promotion of Open Access to Scientific Information and Research is organized in the frame of the Fourth International Conference on Digital Presentation and Preservation of Cultural and Scientific Heritage—DiPP2014 (September 18–21, 2014, Veliko Tarnovo, Bulgaria, http://dipp2014.math.bas.bg/), organized under the UNESCO patronage. The main organiser is the Institute of Mathematics and Informatics, Bulgarian Academy of Sciences with the support of EU project FOSTER (http://www.fosteropenscience.eu/) and the P. R. Slaveykov Regional Public Library in Veliko Tarnovo, Bulgaria
OpenAIREplus
Directions the outcomes of the OpenAIRE project, which
implements the EC Open Access (OA) pilot. Capitalizing on the OpenAIRE
infrastructure, built for managing FP7 and ERC funded articles, and the
associated supporting mechanism of the European Helpdesk System,
OpenAIREplus will “develop an open access, participatory infrastructure for
scientific information”. It will significantly expand its base of harvested
publications to also include all OA publications indexed by the DRIVER
infrastructure (more than 270 validated institutional repositories) and any other
repository containing “peer-reviewed literature” that complies with certain
standards. It will also generically harvest and index the metadata of scientific
datasets in selected diverse OA thematic data repositories. It will support the
concept of linked publications by deploying novel services for “linking peer-
reviewed literature and associated data sets and collections”, from link
discovery based on diverse forms of mining (textual, usage, etc.), to storage,
visual representation, and on-line exploration. It will offer both user-level
services to experts and “non-scientists” alike as well as programming interfaces
for “providers of value-added services” to build applications on its content.
Deposited articles and data will be openly accessible through an enhanced
version of the OpenAIRE portal, together with any available relevant
information on associated project funding and usage statistics. OpenAIREplus
will retain its European footprint, engaging people and scientific repositories in
almost all 27 EU member states and beyond. The technical work will be
complemented by a suite of studies and associated research efforts that will
partly proceed in collaboration with “different European initiatives” and
investigate issues of “intellectual property rights, efficient financing models,
and standards”.Acknowledgments. This work was supported in part by Open Access Infrastructure
for Research in Europe (OpenAIRE) EU project, the Bulgarian National Science Fund
under the Project D002-308 "Automated Metadata Generating for e-Documents
Specifications and Standards"
Virtual Celebrator Machine
There has been a huge growth of social network in the recent years. This trend does not only allow us to get connected and share the information in an efficient way, but also reveals some potential beneficial in dealing with several social issues, such as earthquake detection, social spam detection, flu pandemic tracking, media monitoring, etc.
In this paper, we propose a new way of utilizing social network. By implementing what is called a Virtual Celebrator Machine (VCM), we are able to let everyone who has connection with this machine in term of social networking be able to share their cultural experience and points of view about certain social events locally or globally. In that way, we provide a way to reinforce the relationship and connection between people virtually, which, we believe, would help to flourish cultural heritage preservation
Open Access and Institutional Repositories in Bulgaria
The paper presents the current situation regarding open access,
institutional repositories (IRs) and journals in Bulgaria. It focuses on e-
publications and related research content available in digital format on the web.
It includes development of IRs in Bulgaria and discusses their content, software
and various access restrictions that apply to content. A survey is used to identify
current state of open access for IR and e-journals not just those that are using
OAI-PMH
Fourth National Information Day and Workshop: Open Access to Scientific Information and Data
The paper presents in brief the “2nd Generation Open Access Infrastructure for Research in Europe” project (http://www.openaire.eu/) and what is done in Bulgaria during the last year in the area of open access to scientific information and data.This work was supported in part by the EU project „2 nd Generation Open Access Infrastructure for Research in Europe" (OpenAIRE+)
The Future of the Next-Generation Internet and Possible Applications into Education and Culture Heritage
There are several initiatives such as: US Ignite, Software Defined
Networking (SDN), OpenFlow, Global Environment for Network Innovation
(GENI), WiMAX and Internet 2 dealing with the future of the internet. The goal
of the paper is to understand the goals, intricacies, and nuances of some of these
techniques and show some of the possibilities of next-generation high-speed
networking and their applications into education and culture heritage
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