7 resultados para INTERACTIVE TELEVISION
em Repositório Científico do Instituto Politécnico de Lisboa - Portugal
Resumo:
Dissertação apresentada à Escola Superior de Comunicação Social como parte dos requisitos para obtenção de grau de mestre em Audiovisual e Multimédia.
Resumo:
The present work reports on the practical cooperation between two Universities from Hungary and Portugal. Students from Portugal are remotely accessing an experimental facility, which is physically in Hungary. The cooperation among these Higher Education establishments allowed the development and testing of a Remote Laboratory at the BME. This paper reports on the characteristics and initial testing of the Thermocouples Rise Time Measurement System and provides information on development and students' feedback.
Resumo:
Foreign News about events that takes place in other country Actors are defined as people who appear in the item (as individuals or as representing some entity) speaking or being quoted (directly or indirectly)
Resumo:
Num contexto de mudança a nível de hábitos sociais em que impera a necessidade de comunicar de uma forma mais natural e instantânea quanto possível, o cada vez mais informado e exigente consumidor tem vindo a adquirir um papel mais participativo na comunicação e construção das marcas. Se outrora assistíamos passivamente a uma comunicação unidirecional e desprovida de interactividade, hoje impera a possibilidade de podermos manipular ou construir conteúdos de acordo com as nossas necessidades e preferências individuais. Neste contexto, a comunicação nos novos meios tecnológicos tem procurado responder à dispersão de atenção por parte do consumidor, que se socorre simultaneamente de diversos ecrãs. Porém, no ecrã em que o novo consumidor mais despende o seu tempo, e com o qual ainda se sente mais à vontade, a televisão, a comunicação interactiva ainda se encontra pouca explorada. Para os profissionais de publicidade, e sobretudo para os anunciantes, o conceito de publicidade interactiva, quando inserida no meio televisivo, é deveras recente, carecendo de um maior aprofundamento teórico e empírico. Tendo em vista este aprofundamento, o objectivo geral deste trabalho consiste na caracterização do panorama da publicidade interactiva na televisão em Portugal tendo como termo de comparação o estrangeiro. A dissertação assumiu a forma de um estudo exploratório e misto sequencial, desenvolvido com base na análise de conteúdo de um conjunto de casos nacionais de Publicidade Interactiva na Televisão fornecidos pelo MEO e de casos estrangeiros publicados na Internet. Assentando a análise numa grelha própria, procurou caracterizar-se o panorama actual da Publicidade Interactiva na Televisão nacional tendo como termo de comparação o que se passa lá fora, do ponto de vista dos conteúdos, da partilha destes, da dependência de um second screen e dos objectivos subjacentes aos anúncios. Foi possível concluir com este estudo que, apesar de a Publicidade Interactiva na Televisão se encontrar mais desenvolvida no estrangeiro, em Portugal observaram-se características singulares e positivas, o que aponta que nos encontramos a evoluir a passos largos para alcançar melhores experiências interactivas.
Resumo:
A classical application of biosignal analysis has been the psychophysiological detection of deception, also known as the polygraph test, which is currently a part of standard practices of law enforcement agencies and several other institutions worldwide. Although its validity is far from gathering consensus, the underlying psychophysiological principles are still an interesting add-on for more informal applications. In this paper we present an experimental off-the-person hardware setup, propose a set of feature extraction criteria and provide a comparison of two classification approaches, targeting the detection of deception in the context of a role-playing interactive multimedia environment. Our work is primarily targeted at recreational use in the context of a science exhibition, where the main goal is to present basic concepts related with knowledge discovery, biosignal analysis and psychophysiology in an educational way, using techniques that are simple enough to be understood by children of different ages. Nonetheless, this setting will also allow us to build a significant data corpus, annotated with ground-truth information, and collected with non-intrusive sensors, enabling more advanced research on the topic. Experimental results have shown interesting findings and provided useful guidelines for future work. Pattern Recognition
Resumo:
This chapter discusses the role of television within Portuguese family life. In particular, it examines how the domestication of television within the home is influenced by the social context in which different types of families live. The research is framed around the theory of domestication and based on 50 semi-structured interviews.1 “Domestication” is the process by which the household and its surroundings (both private and the public), together with the moral and formal or objective economy, are related to each other and become mutually constitutive (Silverstone, Hirsch and Morley 1999). The metaphor of “domestication” originally comes from the taming of wild animals, but has been usefully applied to the “domestication” of information communication technology (ICT), including television, within the home. Silverstone et al. (1999) have developed a range of concepts to capture this process, of which the best known are: “appropriation”, “objectification”, “incorporation” and “conversion”. These categories describe how the entry of ICT into the home is managed; how artefacts are physically (and symbolically) placed within the home; how they are adapted into everyday routines; and how they are displayed to others (Haddon 2007, 26). These four key concepts will be used in this chapter to discuss the importance of television within Portugal as an example of a small country in which there has been little research using this particular theoretical approach. Most studies on Portuguese television have focused on televisual history or come from research into trends in television consumption. The domestication theory is a holistic framework, useful to explain the meaning of television in Portuguese homes in all the stages of its presence in daily life. This forms part of a larger international project entitled Digital Inclusion and Participation: Comparing the Trajectories of Digital Media Use by Majority and Disadvantage Groups in Portugal and in the USA (UT Austin/Portugal Program).
Resumo:
In global scientific experiments with collaborative scenarios involving multinational teams there are big challenges related to data access, namely data movements are precluded to other regions or Clouds due to the constraints on latency costs, data privacy and data ownership. Furthermore, each site is processing local data sets using specialized algorithms and producing intermediate results that are helpful as inputs to applications running on remote sites. This paper shows how to model such collaborative scenarios as a scientific workflow implemented with AWARD (Autonomic Workflow Activities Reconfigurable and Dynamic), a decentralized framework offering a feasible solution to run the workflow activities on distributed data centers in different regions without the need of large data movements. The AWARD workflow activities are independently monitored and dynamically reconfigured and steering by different users, namely by hot-swapping the algorithms to enhance the computation results or by changing the workflow structure to support feedback dependencies where an activity receives feedback output from a successor activity. A real implementation of one practical scenario and its execution on multiple data centers of the Amazon Cloud is presented including experimental results with steering by multiple users.