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Software enriches real images on museum tour

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CIOL Bureau
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LONDON, UK: Researchers have developed a digital technology that enriches real images on a virtual tour through ancient buildings, creating a more vivid experience for the museum visitor.

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This digital technology has been highlighted by a recent exhibition in the Allard Pierson Museum, Amsterdam, where visitors could saunter through historical sites.

A flat screen on a rotating column stood beside the many art works, showing an extract of the image on the wall - a gigantic black and white photo of the Roman Forum ruins.

When the column is rotated to the left, this correspondingly changes what the viewer sees. A camera connected to the back of the movable display provides information about the new view appearing on the monitor - in this case, the Temple of Saturn ruins.

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At the same time, a digital animation shows what the temple might have looked like when intact. If the screen is rotated further, it displays information, pictures and videos about other ancient buildings, including the Colosseum.

The sophisticated animation is based on software developed by the Fraunhofer Institute for Computer Graphics Research IGD in Darmstadt.

"We have taught the computer to recognise the image," explains Fraunhofer IGD researcher, Michael Z?er.

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"The program knows where the centre of the camera is pointing and can superimpose the relevant overlay - a text, video or animation."

The original image can always be clearly seen under the overlays, so that visitors always know where they are on the virtual tour. This technology is known as augmented reality to the experts.

The Fraunhofer IGD software in the museum currently runs on a mini-computer, controlled via a touch screen, says a Fraunhofer institute release.

This handy console clearly indicates a trend towards mobile, virtual guidebooks. When tourists will hold their consoles in front of a baroque prince's palace, the relevant customised information will appear immediately on their screens.

©IANS

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