The relevance of local knowledge in cultural heritage is by now acknowledged. It helps to determine many community-based projects by identifying the material to be digitally maintained in multimedia collections provided by communities of volunteers, rather than for-profit businesses or government entities. Considering that the search and browsing of texts, images, video, and 3D models related to places is more essential than using a simple text-based search, an interactive multimedia map was implemented in this study. The map, which is loaded on a single HyperText Markup Language (HTML) page using AJAX (Asynchronous JavaScript and XML), with a client-side control mechanism utilising jQuery components that are both freely available and ad-hoc developed, is updated according to user interaction. To simplify the publication of geo-referenced information, the application stores all the data in a Geographic JavaScript Object Notation (GeoJSON) file rather than in a database. The multimedia contents--associated with the selected Points of Interest (PoIs)--can be selected through text search and list browsing as well as by viewing their previews one by one in a sequence all together in a scrolling window (respectively: "Table", "Folder", and "Tile" functions). PoIs--visualised on the map with multi-shape markers using a set of unambiguous colours--can be filtered through their categories and types, accessibility status and timeline, thus improving the system usability. The map functions are illustrated using data collected in a Comenius

One-Page Multimedia Interactive Map

Nicola Maiellaro;Antonietta Varasano
2017

Abstract

The relevance of local knowledge in cultural heritage is by now acknowledged. It helps to determine many community-based projects by identifying the material to be digitally maintained in multimedia collections provided by communities of volunteers, rather than for-profit businesses or government entities. Considering that the search and browsing of texts, images, video, and 3D models related to places is more essential than using a simple text-based search, an interactive multimedia map was implemented in this study. The map, which is loaded on a single HyperText Markup Language (HTML) page using AJAX (Asynchronous JavaScript and XML), with a client-side control mechanism utilising jQuery components that are both freely available and ad-hoc developed, is updated according to user interaction. To simplify the publication of geo-referenced information, the application stores all the data in a Geographic JavaScript Object Notation (GeoJSON) file rather than in a database. The multimedia contents--associated with the selected Points of Interest (PoIs)--can be selected through text search and list browsing as well as by viewing their previews one by one in a sequence all together in a scrolling window (respectively: "Table", "Folder", and "Tile" functions). PoIs--visualised on the map with multi-shape markers using a set of unambiguous colours--can be filtered through their categories and types, accessibility status and timeline, thus improving the system usability. The map functions are illustrated using data collected in a Comenius
2017
Istituto per le Tecnologie della Costruzione - ITC
Single-Page Application
model view controller
multimedia
mapping
VGI
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14243/333108
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