Proceedings of the 2010 ACM Symposium on Applied Computing 2010
DOI: 10.1145/1774088.1774496
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Distributed discrimination of media moments and media intervals

Abstract: The Watch-and-Comment paradigm has been proposed as the seamless capture of comments made by users when appreciating a video, which is watched using a computer or a TV set, for example. The comments can be associated with the original media in several ways so as to generate interactive videos automatically -the interactive video corresponding to the original video annotated with the captured comments. In this paper we explore the application of the Watch-and-Comment approach in situations in which the annotati… Show more

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Cited by 10 publications
(5 citation statements)
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References 18 publications
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“…Offline indexing can occur in the (3rd) post-production phase, such as the generation of derived indexes [5]. Review-time explicit indexes obtained from user-media interaction can be built during the (4th) access phase, while the user reviews captured media elements (by means of annotations or discrimination of moments [31], for instance). Such user-media interactions can be used to enrich and generate new versions of the original media elements [8] in the (5th) extension phase.…”
Section: Theoretical Backgroundmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Offline indexing can occur in the (3rd) post-production phase, such as the generation of derived indexes [5]. Review-time explicit indexes obtained from user-media interaction can be built during the (4th) access phase, while the user reviews captured media elements (by means of annotations or discrimination of moments [31], for instance). Such user-media interactions can be used to enrich and generate new versions of the original media elements [8] in the (5th) extension phase.…”
Section: Theoretical Backgroundmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…We have also shown how new document-based applications can be built by allowing users to discriminate moments and intervals while watching interactive multimedia programs on TV using their own mobile devices [34]. We plan to integrate the document model we presented in those efforts.…”
Section: Related Workmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Later, the CWaC (Collaborative WaC) tool [Fagá et al, 2010] was proposed to allow not only collaboration via text messages but also synchronous multimodal annotation: in this case, geographically distributed users could annotate a single video at the same time (Figure 2.11). Collaboration issues were also developed in another extension tackling mixed collaboration: a group of distributed users watching TV could use personal mobile devices to bookmark [Teixeira et al, 2010b] or apply stickers [Teixeira et al, 2011] to a video: later, users gather at a location (e.g. a class) and these annotations are merged in a media center (e.g.…”
Section: Watch and Comment (Wac)mentioning
confidence: 99%