10-04-2012, 12:59 PM
INTELEGENT MULTIMEDIA INTRECTION
MULTIMEDIA.docx (Size: 88.65 KB / Downloads: 44)
INTRODUCTION
Recent technological advances have made feasible the development of Intelligent Multimedia User Interfaces (IMUIs), which increase the bandwidth of the information flow between the human and the machine, improve the ‘signal-to-noise ratio’ of the information exchanged, and thus facilitate a more effective and efficient user-computer interaction, attempting to imitate human communication [1].
• Multimedia: physical means via which information is input, output and/or stored (e.g., interactive devices such as keyboard, mouse, displays; storage devices such as disk or CD-ROM).
• Multimodal: human perceptual processes such as vision, audition, traction.
• Multimodal: representations used to encode atomic, elements, syntax, semantics, pragmatics and related data structures (e.g., lexicons, grammars) associated with media and modalities.
Intelligent multimedia interaction
Combining the arts, science, artificial intelligence, computer science, and the humanities, intelligent multimedia computing has the potential to create significant advances in information technologies. In this upper-division defines the notion of intelligent media and then covers creative multimedia techniques in virtual reality, basic morphs, motion pictures, animation techniques and flash MX, artificial intelligence and intelligent multimedia media object paradigms, basic intelligent multimedia techniques, agent computing, mathematical foundations, intelligent visual databases and data mines.
Multimedia Message Systems
Multimedia message systems are extensions of contemporary electronic mail and conference systems which include multimedia data handling capabilities. Multimedia message systems can create, transmit, receive, reply to, forward, save, retrieve, and delete multimedia messages. As part of the message creation and editing processes, multimedia message systems can import different media materials and integrate them.
Conclusion
We have outlined the history, developments and future of systems and research in multimedia communication. If successfully developed and employed, these systems promise:
• More efficient interaction: enabling more rapid task completion with less work.
• More effective interaction: doing the right thing at the right time, tailoring the content and form of the interaction to the context of the user, task, dialogue.
• More natural interaction: supporting spoken, written, and gestural interaction, ideally as if interacting with a human interlocutor.