User:Danielletpayne/sandbox
Article Evaluation
[edit]Hrvoje Benko
Archaeology
[edit]AR has been used to aid archaeological research. By augmenting archaeological features onto the modern landscape, AR allows archaeologists to formulate possible site configurations from extant structures.[1] Computer generated models of ruins, buildings, landscapes or even ancient people have been recycled into early archaeological AR applications. (-- edit starts here--) For example, implementing a system like, "VITA (Visual Interaction Tool for Archaeology)" will allow users to imagine and investigate instant excavation results without leaving their home. Each user can collaborate by mutually "navigating, searching, and viewing data." Hrvjone Benko, a researcher for the computer science department at Colombia University, points out that these particular systems and others like it can provide "3D panoramic images and 3D models of the site itself at different excavation stages." All a while, it organizes much of the data in a collaborative way that is easy to use. Collaborative AR systems supply multimodal interactions that combine the real world with virtual images of both environments.[2]
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- ^ Stuart Eve. "Augmenting Phenomenology: Using Augmented Reality to Aid Archaeological Phenomenology in the Landscape". Journal of Archaeological Method and Theory. 19: 582–600. doi:10.1007/s10816-012-9142-7.
- ^ Benko, Hrvoje (2004). "Collaborative Mixed Reality Visualization of an Archaeological Excavation". 1: 1–3. doi:10.1145/1040000/1033710/21910132.pdf.