AHCI RESEARCH GROUP
Publications
Papers published in international journals,
proceedings of conferences, workshops and books.
OUR RESEARCH
Scientific Publications
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2020
Caggianese, Giuseppe; Pietro, Giuseppe De; Esposito, Massimo; Gallo, Luigi; Minutolo, Aniello; Neroni, Pietro
Discovering Leonardo with Artificial Intelligence and Holograms: A User Study Journal Article
In: Pattern Recognition Letters, vol. 131, pp. 361–367, 2020, ISSN: 0167-8655.
Abstract | Links | BibTeX | Tags: Artificial intelligence, Conversational systems, Cultural heritage, Holograms, Touchless interfaces, User study
@article{caggianeseDiscoveringLeonardoArtificial2020,
title = {Discovering Leonardo with Artificial Intelligence and Holograms: A User Study},
author = { Giuseppe Caggianese and Giuseppe De Pietro and Massimo Esposito and Luigi Gallo and Aniello Minutolo and Pietro Neroni},
doi = {10.1016/j.patrec.2020.01.006},
issn = {0167-8655},
year = {2020},
date = {2020-01-01},
journal = {Pattern Recognition Letters},
volume = {131},
pages = {361--367},
abstract = {Cutting-edge visualization and interaction technologies are increasingly used in museum exhibitions, providing novel ways to engage visitors and enhance their cultural experience. Existing applications are commonly built upon a single technology, focusing on visualization, motion or verbal interaction (e.g., high-resolution projections, gesture interfaces, chatbots). This aspect limits their potential, since museums are highly heterogeneous in terms of visitors profiles and interests, requiring multi-channel, customizable interaction modalities. To this aim, this work describes and evaluates an artificial intelligence powered, interactive holographic stand aimed at describing Leonardo Da Vinci's art. This system provides the users with accurate 3D representations of Leonardo's machines, which can be interactively manipulated through a touchless user interface. It is also able to dialog with the users in natural language about Leonardo's art, while keeping the context of conversation and interactions. Furthermore, the results of a large user study, carried out during art and tech exhibitions, are presented and discussed. The goal was to assess how users of different ages and interests perceive, understand and explore cultural objects when holograms and artificial intelligence are used as instruments of knowledge and analysis.},
keywords = {Artificial intelligence, Conversational systems, Cultural heritage, Holograms, Touchless interfaces, User study},
pubstate = {published},
tppubtype = {article}
}
Caggianese, Giuseppe; Pietro, Giuseppe De; Esposito, Massimo; Gallo, Luigi; Minutolo, Aniello; Neroni, Pietro
Discovering Leonardo with artificial intelligence and holograms: A user study Journal Article
In: Pattern Recognition Letters, vol. 131, pp. 361–367, 2020, ISSN: 0167-8655.
Abstract | Links | BibTeX | Tags: Artificial intelligence, Conversational systems, Cultural heritage, Holograms, Touchless interfaces, User study
@article{caggianese_discovering_2020,
title = {Discovering Leonardo with artificial intelligence and holograms: A user study},
author = {Giuseppe Caggianese and Giuseppe De Pietro and Massimo Esposito and Luigi Gallo and Aniello Minutolo and Pietro Neroni},
url = {https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0167865520300039},
doi = {https://doi.org/10.1016/j.patrec.2020.01.006},
issn = {0167-8655},
year = {2020},
date = {2020-01-01},
journal = {Pattern Recognition Letters},
volume = {131},
pages = {361–367},
abstract = {Cutting-edge visualization and interaction technologies are increasingly used in museum exhibitions, providing novel ways to engage visitors and enhance their cultural experience. Existing applications are commonly built upon a single technology, focusing on visualization, motion or verbal interaction (e.g., high-resolution projections, gesture interfaces, chatbots). This aspect limits their potential, since museums are highly heterogeneous in terms of visitors profiles and interests, requiring multi-channel, customizable interaction modalities. To this aim, this work describes and evaluates an artificial intelligence powered, interactive holographic stand aimed at describing Leonardo Da Vinci’s art. This system provides the users with accurate 3D representations of Leonardo’s machines, which can be interactively manipulated through a touchless user interface. It is also able to dialog with the users in natural language about Leonardo’s art, while keeping the context of conversation and interactions. Furthermore, the results of a large user study, carried out during art and tech exhibitions, are presented and discussed. The goal was to assess how users of different ages and interests perceive, understand and explore cultural objects when holograms and artificial intelligence are used as instruments of knowledge and analysis.},
keywords = {Artificial intelligence, Conversational systems, Cultural heritage, Holograms, Touchless interfaces, User study},
pubstate = {published},
tppubtype = {article}
}