bibtype J - Journal Article
ARLID 0447984
utime 20240903204333.5
mtime 20151015235959.9
WOS 000421886600005
title (primary) (eng) Virtual Reconstruction of Cultural Heritage Artifacts
specification
page_count 2 s.
media_type P
serial
ARLID cav_un_epca*0290490
ISSN 0926-4981
title ERCIM News
volume_id 2015
volume 103 (2015)
page_num 12-13
publisher
name European Research Consortium for Informatics and Mathematics
keyword virtual reconstruction
keyword shape modeling
keyword surface modeling
keyword bidirectional texture function
author (primary)
ARLID cav_un_auth*0101093
full_dept (cz) Rozpoznávání obrazu
full_dept (eng) Department of Pattern Recognition
department (cz) RO
department (eng) RO
full_dept Department of Pattern Recognition
name1 Haindl
name2 Michal
institution UTIA-B
fullinstit Ústav teorie informace a automatizace AV ČR, v. v. i.
author
ARLID cav_un_auth*0320130
full_dept (cz) Rozpoznávání obrazu
full_dept Department of Pattern Recognition
department (cz) RO
department RO
full_dept Department of Pattern Recognition
name1 Sedláček
name2 Matěj
institution UTIA-B
fullinstit Ústav teorie informace a automatizace AV ČR, v. v. i.
author
ARLID cav_un_auth*0282273
full_dept (cz) Rozpoznávání obrazu
full_dept Department of Pattern Recognition
department (cz) RO
department RO
full_dept Department of Pattern Recognition
name1 Vávra
name2 Radomír
institution UTIA-B
fullinstit Ústav teorie informace a automatizace AV ČR, v. v. i.
source
url http://library.utia.cas.cz/separaty/2015/RO/haindl-0447984.pdf
cas_special
project
ARLID cav_un_auth*0303439
project_id GA14-10911S
agency GA ČR
country CZ
abstract (eng) Museums and other cultural heritage custodians are interested in digitizing their collections, not only for the sake of preserving cultural heritage, but also to make the information content accessible and affordable to researchers and the general public. Once an object’s digital model is created it can be digitally reconstructed to its original uneroded or unbroken shape or realistically visualized using different historical materials. Some artifacts are so fragile that they cannot leave the carefully controlled light, humidity, and temperature of their storage facilities, thus they are already inaccessible to the public, and the viable alternative is their exhibition in the form of an augmented reality scene. Researchers at the Institute of Information Theory and Automation (UTIA) of the Czech Academy of Sciences in Prague have developed a sophisticated measurement and processing setup to enable the construction of physically correct virtual models.
RIV BD
reportyear 2016
num_of_auth 3
inst_support RVO:67985556
permalink http://hdl.handle.net/11104/0250228
confidential S
arlyear 2015
mrcbU34 000421886600005 WOS
mrcbU63 cav_un_epca*0290490 ERCIM News 0926-4981 1564-0094 Roč. 2015 č. 103 2015 12 13 European Research Consortium for Informatics and Mathematics