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This paper presents an approach for leveraging the abundance of images posted on social media like Twitter for large scale 3D reconstruction of cultural heritage landmarks. Twitter allows users to post short messages, including photos, describing a plethora of activities or events, e.g., tweets are used by travelers on vacation, capturing images from various cultural heritage assets. As such, a great number of images are available online, able to drive a successful 3D reconstruction process. However, reconstruction of any asset, based on images mined from Twitter, presents several challenges. There are three main steps that have to be considered: (i) tweets’ content identification, (ii) image retrieval and filtering, and (iii) 3D reconstruction. The proposed approach first extracts key events from unstructured tweet messages and then identifies cultural activities and landmarks. The second stage is the application of a content-based filtering method so that only a small but representative portion of cultural images are selected to support fast 3D reconstruction. The proposed methods are experimentally evaluated using real-world data and comparisons verify the effectiveness of the proposed scheme.
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Anastasios Doulamis
National Technical University of Athens
Athanasios Voulodimos
National Technical University of Athens
Eftychios Protopapadakis
National Technical University of Athens
Sustainability
National Technical University of Athens
University of Malta
University of West Attica
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Doulamis et al. (Thu,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/6a213938a2a97f3a085ad41b — DOI: https://doi.org/10.3390/su12104223
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