Interactive Multimedia SystemsRahman, Syed M. Idea Group Inc (IGI), 2001. gada 1. jūl. - 316 lappuses Multimedia technology has the potential to evolve the paradigm of end user computing, from the interactive text and graphics model that has developed since the 1950s, into one more compatible with the digital electronic world of the next century. Decreasing hardware costs, a relatively inexpensive storage capacity and a rapid increasing computing power and network bandwidth, all major requirements of multimedia applications, have contributed to the recent tremendous growth in production and use of multimedia contents. Interactive Multimedia Systems addresses these innovative technologies and how they can positively impact a variety of areas. |
No grāmatas satura
1.5. rezultāts no 67.
... analysis, the educator could control the order of their presentations such that each media presentationhadaplanned impact on the major components of alearning cycle attention, rehearsal, encoding, and retrieval. Opportunity to access ...
... analysis to derive a number of principles that reflect the requirements for supporting and enhancing the userinthe digital video navigation task. Chapter 14 entitled, A Linguistically Sortable Bengali Coding Systemand Its Application ...
... analysis and indexing aspects without fully understanding the context and content semantics. There is an abundance of research work in this area in the past decade. Most of the approaches either apply high level or low level concepts ...
... Analysis Approaches In the past decade we have seen different approaches to the problem of content analysis and indexing for different media content applications. We will broadly classify these methods into two categories: Bottom up ...
... analysis, the depth of the analysis algorithms and type of access and visualization. Unimodal vs. Multimodal archived content. The content archive could contain single type of media: for example an advertising agency could be ...
Saturs
1 | |
Chapter 2 Design and Evaluation of a ContentBased Image Retrieval System | 38 |
Chapter 3 A Multimedia Document Retrieval System Supporting Structureand ContentBased Retrieval | 73 |
Chapter 4 Semantic ContentBased Retrieval for Video Documents | 89 |
Chapter 5 Educational Multimedia and Teacher Competencies | 136 |
Chapter 6 Cognition Research Basis for Instructional Multimedia | 146 |
Chapter 7 Cheap Production of Multimedia Programs | 163 |
Chapter 8 Multimedia Copyright Protection | 173 |
Chapter 11 Remote Control for Videoconferencing | 219 |
Chapter 12 A Collaborative DesignbySketching Conceptual Design Tool for Multimedia Application Development | 231 |
Chapter 13 Principles for Supporting and Enhancing User Navigation of Digital Video in Video Browsers | 239 |
A Case Study of Multilingual Applications | 251 |
Chapter 15 Design of a CBIR System Supporting High Level Concepts | 259 |
Chapter 16 A New Encryption Algorithm for High Throughput Multimedia | 269 |
Chapter 17 Video Performance in Java | 283 |
About the Editor | 293 |
Chapter 9 Software Reuse in Hypermedia Applications | 195 |
Chapter 10 A Flexible Framework for the KnowledgeBased Generation of Multimedia Presentations | 204 |
Index | 294 |