Personalised museum experiences driven by date-based association discovery
22 January 2020, 5:30 pm–7:30 pm
By creating links to specific dates we can trigger curiosity, increase retention, and guide visitors around the venue following new appealing narratives in subsequent visits.
This event is free.
Event Information
Open to
- All
Availability
- Yes
Cost
- Free
Organiser
-
UCLDH
Location
-
G31, ground floorFoster CourtMalet PlaceLONDONWC1E 7JEUnited Kingdom
Museum visitors' interests and input can be employed by semantics-based mechanisms that aim to promote reflection on cultural heritage by means of dates (historical events or annual commemorations). By creating links to specific dates we can trigger curiosity, increase retention, and guide visitors around the venue following new appealing narratives in subsequent visits.
The research presents the development and evaluation of a set of diverse narratives about museums exhibits originating from the Archaeological Museum of Tripoli (a small regional museum in Greece). A year-round calendar was crafted so that certain narratives would be more or less relevant on any given day. Expanding on this calendar, personalised recommendations are made by sorting out those relevant narratives according to personal events and interests recorded in the profiles of the target museum visitors. Taking advantage of a broad range of techniques for semantic modelling, named entity recognition and linking, online data repositories and word vector models, the resulting associations are shown to be deemed accurate (directly or indirectly) by potential visitors. Evaluation results from an experiment involving domain experts and users suggest that calendar-based connections can reveal useful and valuable associations, which can be used to tailor user experiences and engagement with cultural heritage content, discover meaningful connections and deliver incidental associations that contribute to the intended cognitive phenomena.
All are welcome and there will be drinks and discussion after the presentations. Attendance is free but we kindly ask that you register for the event.
This event is organised by UCLDH, which is part of the UCL Institute of Advanced Studies.
About the Speaker
Dr. Andreas Vlachidis
Lecturer (Assistant Professor) at UCL Department of Information Studies
My main research interests are in Information Extraction, Text Analytics, Knowledge-Based Systems and Ontologies, particularly in semantic annotation and metadata enrichment with respect to conceptual reference models, ontologies and knowledge base resources. I have contributed to the cultural heritage data modelling and semantic enrichment aims of the EU Horizon 2020 project CrossCult, whereas in the past I have contributed to the EU FP7 Ariadne Framework researching the multilingual application of Natural Language Processing in archaeological grey literature. I have also developed the Welsh Natural Language Processing Toolkit of the General Architecture for Text Engineering GATE.
More about Dr. Andreas Vlachidis