3D Reconstructions as Research Hubs: Geospatial Interfaces for Real-Time Data Exploration of Seventeenth-Century Amsterdam Domestic Interiors

This paper presents our ongoing work in the Virtual Interiors project, which aims to develop 3D reconstructions as geospatial interfaces to structure and explore historical data of seventeenth-century Amsterdam. We take the reconstruction of the entrance hall of the house of the patrician Pieter de...

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Autores principales: Huurdeman Hugo, Piccoli Chiara
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Lenguaje:EN
Publicado: De Gruyter 2021
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Acceso en línea:https://doaj.org/article/673f856cb4bb47d296540a391a7abc45
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spelling oai:doaj.org-article:673f856cb4bb47d296540a391a7abc452021-12-05T14:10:59Z3D Reconstructions as Research Hubs: Geospatial Interfaces for Real-Time Data Exploration of Seventeenth-Century Amsterdam Domestic Interiors2300-656010.1515/opar-2020-0142https://doaj.org/article/673f856cb4bb47d296540a391a7abc452021-06-01T00:00:00Zhttps://doi.org/10.1515/opar-2020-0142https://doaj.org/toc/2300-6560This paper presents our ongoing work in the Virtual Interiors project, which aims to develop 3D reconstructions as geospatial interfaces to structure and explore historical data of seventeenth-century Amsterdam. We take the reconstruction of the entrance hall of the house of the patrician Pieter de Graeff (1638–1707) as our case study and use it to illustrate the iterative process of knowledge creation, sharing, and discovery that unfolds while creating, exploring and experiencing the 3D models in a prototype research environment. During this work, an interdisciplinary dataset was collected, various metadata and paradata were created to document both the sources and the reasoning process, and rich contextual links were added. These data were used as the basis for creating a user interface for an online research environment, taking design principles and previous user studies into account. Knowledge is shared by visualizing the 3D reconstructions along with the related complexities and uncertainties, while the integration of various underlying data and Linked Data makes it possible to discover contextual knowledge by exploring associated resources. Moreover, we outline how users of the research environment can add annotations and rearrange objects in the scene, facilitating further knowledge discovery and creation.Huurdeman HugoPiccoli ChiaraDe Gruyterarticlevirtual reconstructionsdigital humanitiesinterface designhuman–computer interactiondomestic architectureArchaeologyCC1-960ENOpen Archaeology, Vol 7, Iss 1, Pp 314-336 (2021)
institution DOAJ
collection DOAJ
language EN
topic virtual reconstructions
digital humanities
interface design
human–computer interaction
domestic architecture
Archaeology
CC1-960
spellingShingle virtual reconstructions
digital humanities
interface design
human–computer interaction
domestic architecture
Archaeology
CC1-960
Huurdeman Hugo
Piccoli Chiara
3D Reconstructions as Research Hubs: Geospatial Interfaces for Real-Time Data Exploration of Seventeenth-Century Amsterdam Domestic Interiors
description This paper presents our ongoing work in the Virtual Interiors project, which aims to develop 3D reconstructions as geospatial interfaces to structure and explore historical data of seventeenth-century Amsterdam. We take the reconstruction of the entrance hall of the house of the patrician Pieter de Graeff (1638–1707) as our case study and use it to illustrate the iterative process of knowledge creation, sharing, and discovery that unfolds while creating, exploring and experiencing the 3D models in a prototype research environment. During this work, an interdisciplinary dataset was collected, various metadata and paradata were created to document both the sources and the reasoning process, and rich contextual links were added. These data were used as the basis for creating a user interface for an online research environment, taking design principles and previous user studies into account. Knowledge is shared by visualizing the 3D reconstructions along with the related complexities and uncertainties, while the integration of various underlying data and Linked Data makes it possible to discover contextual knowledge by exploring associated resources. Moreover, we outline how users of the research environment can add annotations and rearrange objects in the scene, facilitating further knowledge discovery and creation.
format article
author Huurdeman Hugo
Piccoli Chiara
author_facet Huurdeman Hugo
Piccoli Chiara
author_sort Huurdeman Hugo
title 3D Reconstructions as Research Hubs: Geospatial Interfaces for Real-Time Data Exploration of Seventeenth-Century Amsterdam Domestic Interiors
title_short 3D Reconstructions as Research Hubs: Geospatial Interfaces for Real-Time Data Exploration of Seventeenth-Century Amsterdam Domestic Interiors
title_full 3D Reconstructions as Research Hubs: Geospatial Interfaces for Real-Time Data Exploration of Seventeenth-Century Amsterdam Domestic Interiors
title_fullStr 3D Reconstructions as Research Hubs: Geospatial Interfaces for Real-Time Data Exploration of Seventeenth-Century Amsterdam Domestic Interiors
title_full_unstemmed 3D Reconstructions as Research Hubs: Geospatial Interfaces for Real-Time Data Exploration of Seventeenth-Century Amsterdam Domestic Interiors
title_sort 3d reconstructions as research hubs: geospatial interfaces for real-time data exploration of seventeenth-century amsterdam domestic interiors
publisher De Gruyter
publishDate 2021
url https://doaj.org/article/673f856cb4bb47d296540a391a7abc45
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AT piccolichiara 3dreconstructionsasresearchhubsgeospatialinterfacesforrealtimedataexplorationofseventeenthcenturyamsterdamdomesticinteriors
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