Context and Current Metadata Standards. Furht, B., editor In Encyclopedia of Multimedia, pages 118–118. Springer US, 2008. 00000
Context and Current Metadata Standards [link]Paper  abstract   bibtex   
DefinitionStandards that define human readable and machine understandable metadata of media content.Maintaining human readable and machine understandable metadata descriptions of media content is essential for retrieving, using, and managing non-textual media items. Such descriptions usually contain low-level features (e.g., color histograms) extracted automatically from the underlying media object as well as high-level semantic concepts, annotated by human users. Since semantic content descriptions are always bound to human interpretation, which itself is time- and context-bound, metadata might be misattributed and not very helpful for other users in another context. Assuming that we want to facilitate the user’s ability to formulate contextual queries, it is necessary to maintain context-sensitive metadata. One of the key issues for realizing that goal is the use of context-aware data models and metadata standards [1]. Currently there are two promising, standardized metadat ...
@incollection{furht_context_2008,
	title = {Context and {Current} {Metadata} {Standards}},
	copyright = {©2008 Springer-Verlag},
	isbn = {978-0-387-74724-8 978-0-387-78414-4},
	url = {http://link.springer.com/referenceworkentry/10.1007/978-0-387-78414-4_278},
	abstract = {DefinitionStandards that define human readable and machine understandable metadata of media content.Maintaining human readable and machine understandable metadata descriptions of media content is essential for retrieving, using, and managing non-textual media items. Such descriptions usually contain low-level features (e.g., color histograms) extracted automatically from the underlying media object as well as high-level semantic concepts, annotated by human users. Since semantic content descriptions are always bound to human interpretation, which itself is time- and context-bound, metadata might be misattributed and not very helpful for other users in another context. Assuming that we want to facilitate the user’s ability to formulate contextual queries, it is necessary to maintain context-sensitive metadata. One of the key issues for realizing that goal is the use of context-aware data models and metadata standards [1]. Currently there are two promising, standardized metadat ...},
	language = {en},
	urldate = {2016-05-03},
	booktitle = {Encyclopedia of {Multimedia}},
	publisher = {Springer US},
	editor = {Furht, Borko},
	year = {2008},
	note = {00000},
	pages = {118--118}
}

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