Remote Collaboration Over Video Data: Towards Real-Time e-Social Science
Computer Supported Cooperative Work
The evolution of visual information retrieval
Journal of Information Science
Rich metadata and context capturing through CIDOC/CRM and MPEG-7 interoperability
CIVR '08 Proceedings of the 2008 international conference on Content-based image and video retrieval
Metadata-enhanced visual interfaces to digital libraries
Journal of Information Science
Metadata-driven interactive web video assembly
Multimedia Tools and Applications
Developing a flexible content model for media repositories: a case study
Proceedings of the 9th ACM/IEEE-CS joint conference on Digital libraries
CSCL'09 Proceedings of the 9th international conference on Computer supported collaborative learning - Volume 2
An Intelligent Tool for Narrative-Based Video Annotation and Editing
CISIS '10 Proceedings of the 2010 International Conference on Complex, Intelligent and Software Intensive Systems
Improving the value of archived personal content with aesthetic and reflexive qualities
CCNC'10 Proceedings of the 7th IEEE conference on Consumer communications and networking conference
100 million hours of audiovisual content: digital preservation and access in the PrestoPRIME project
Proceedings of the 1st International Digital Preservation Interoperability Framework Symposium
TPDL'11 Proceedings of the 15th international conference on Theory and practice of digital libraries: research and advanced technology for digital libraries
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Digital heritage archives often lack engaging user interfaces that strike a balance between providing narrative context and affording user interaction and exploration. It seems nevertheless feasible for metadata tagging and a “joined up” workflow to provide a basis for such rich interaction. After outlining relevant research from within and outside the heritage domain, we present our project, FINE (Fluid Interfaces for Narrative Exploration), an effort to develop such a system. Based on content from Wendy James' archive of anthropological research material from the Sudan/Ethiopian borderlands, the FINE project attempts to use structural and thematic metadata to drive exploratory interfaces which link video, images, audio, and text to relevant narrative units. The interfaces also benefit from the temporal and spatial variety of the collection to provide opportunities to discover contrasts and juxtaposition in the material across place and time.