48 resultados para Metadata repository
Resumo:
Nos últimos anos, o fácil acesso em termos de custos, ferramentas de produção, edição e distribuição de conteúdos audiovisuais, contribuíram para o aumento exponencial da produção diária deste tipo de conteúdos. Neste paradigma de superabundância de conteúdos multimédia existe uma grande percentagem de sequências de vídeo que contém material explícito, sendo necessário existir um controlo mais rigoroso, de modo a não ser facilmente acessível a menores. O conceito de conteúdo explícito pode ser caraterizado de diferentes formas, tendo o trabalho descrito neste documento incidido sobre a deteção automática de nudez feminina presente em sequências de vídeo. Este processo de deteção e classificação automática de material para adultos pode constituir uma ferramenta importante na gestão de um canal de televisão. Diariamente podem ser recebidas centenas de horas de material sendo impraticável a implementação de um processo manual de controlo de qualidade. A solução criada no contexto desta dissertação foi estudada e desenvolvida em torno de um produto especifico ligado à área do broadcasting. Este produto é o mxfSPEEDRAIL F1000, sendo este uma solução da empresa MOG Technologies. O objetivo principal do projeto é o desenvolvimento de uma biblioteca em C++, acessível durante o processo de ingest, que permita, através de uma análise baseada em funcionalidades de visão computacional, detetar e sinalizar na metadata do sinal, quais as frames que potencialmente apresentam conteúdo explícito. A solução desenvolvida utiliza um conjunto de técnicas do estado da arte adaptadas ao problema a tratar. Nestas incluem-se algoritmos para realizar a segmentação de pele e deteção de objetos em imagens. Por fim é efetuada uma análise critica à solução desenvolvida no âmbito desta dissertação de modo a que em futuros desenvolvimentos esta seja melhorada a nível do consumo de recursos durante a análise e a nível da sua taxa de sucesso.
Resumo:
These are the proceedings for the eighth national conference on XML, its Associated Technologies and its Applications (XATA'2010). The paper selection resulted in 33% of papers accepted as full papers, and 33% of papers accepted as short papers. While these two types of papers were distinguish during the conference, and they had different talk duration, they all had the same limit of 12 pages. We are happy that the selected papers focus both aspects of the conference: XML technologies, and XML applications. In the first group we can include the articles on parsing and transformation technologies, like “Processing XML: a rewriting system approach", “Visual Programming of XSLT from examples", “A Refactoring Model for XML Documents", “A Performance based Approach for Processing Large XML Files in Multicore Machines", “XML to paper publishing with manual intervention" and “Parsing XML Documents in Java using Annotations". XML-core related papers are also available, focusing XML tools testing on “Test::XML::Generator: Generating XML for Unit Testing" and “XML Archive for Testing: a benchmark for GuessXQ". XML as the base for application development is also present, being discussed on different areas, like “Web Service for Interactive Products and Orders Configuration", “XML Description for Automata Manipulations", “Integration of repositories in Moodle", “XML, Annotations and Database: a Comparative Study of Metadata Definition Strategies for Frameworks", “CardioML: Integrating Personal Cardiac Information for Ubiquous Diagnosis and Analysis", “A Semantic Representation of Users Emotions when Watching Videos" and “Integrating SVG and SMIL in DAISY DTB production to enhance the contents accessibility in the Open Library for Higher Education". The wide spread of subjects makes us believe that for the time being XML is here to stay what enhances the importance of gathering this community to discuss related science and technology. Small conferences are traversing a bad period. Authors look for impact and numbers and only submit their works to big conferences sponsored by the right institutions. However the group of people behind this conference still believes that spaces like this should be preserved and maintained. This 8th gathering marks the beginning of a new cycle. We know who we are, what is our identity and we will keep working to preserve that. We hope the publication containing the works of this year's edition will catch the same attention and interest of the previous editions and above all that this publication helps in some other's work. Finally, we would like to thank all authors for their work and interest in the conference, and to the scientific committee members for their review work.
Resumo:
Crowdsourcing is evolving into powerful outsourcing options for organizations by providing access to the intellectual capital within a vast knowledge community. Innovation brokering services have emerged to facilitate crowdsourcing projects by connecting up companies with potential solution providers within the wider ‘crowd’. Most existing innovation brokering services are primarily aimed at larger organizations, however, Small and Medium Enterprises (SMEs) offer considerable potential for crowdsourcing activity since they are typically the innovation and employment engines in society; they are typically more nimble and responsive to the business environment than the larger companies. SMEs have very different challenges and needs to larger organizations since they have fewer resources, a more limited knowledge and skill base, and immature management practices. Consequently, innovation brokering for SMEs require considerably more support than for larger organizations. This paper identifies the crowdsourcing innovation brokerage facilities needed by SMEs, and presents an architecture that encourages knowledge sharing, development of community, support in mixing and matching capabilities, and management of stakeholders’ risks. Innovation brokering is emerging as a novel business model that is challenging concepts of the traditional value chain and organizational boundaries.