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      Digital Dance Ethnography : Organizing Large Dance Collections

      1 , 2 , 1
      Journal on Computing and Cultural Heritage
      Association for Computing Machinery (ACM)

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          Abstract

          Folk dances often reflect the socio-cultural influences prevailing in different periods and nations; each dance produces a meaning, a story with the help of music, costumes and dance moves. However, dances have no borders; they have been transmitted from generation to generation, along different countries, mainly due to movements of people carrying and disseminating their civilization. Studying the contextual correlation of dances along neighboring countries, unveils the evolution of this unique intangible heritage in time, and helps in understanding potential cultural similarities. In this work we present a method for contextually motion analysis that organizes dance data semantically, to form the first digital dance ethnography. Firstly, we break dance motion sequences into some narrow temporal overlapping feature descriptors, named motion and style words , and then cluster them in a high-dimensional features space to define motifs . The distribution of those motion and style motifs creates motion and style signatures , in the content of a bag-of-motifs representation, that implies for a succinct but descriptive portrayal of motions sequences. Signatures are time-scale and temporal-order invariant, capable of exploiting the contextual correlation between dances, and distinguishing fine-grained difference between semantically similar motions. We then use quartet -based analysis to organize dance data into a categorization tree , while inferred information from dance metadata descriptions are then used to set parent-child relationships. We illustrate a number of different organization trees, and portray the evolution of dances over time. The efficiency of our method is also demonstrated in retrieving contextually similar dances from a database.

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          Visualizing data using t-SNE

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            Convention for the Safeguarding of the Intangible Cultural Heritage

            UNESCO (2003)
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              Human motion retrieval from hand-drawn sketch.

              The rapid growth of motion capture data increases the importance of motion retrieval. The majority of the existing motion retrieval approaches are based on a labor-intensive step in which the user browses and selects a desired query motion clip from the large motion clip database. In this work, a novel sketching interface for defining the query is presented. This simple approach allows users to define the required motion by sketching several motion strokes over a drawn character, which requires less effort and extends the users’ expressiveness. To support the real-time interface, a specialized encoding of the motions and the hand-drawn query is required. Here, we introduce a novel hierarchical encoding scheme based on a set of orthonormal spherical harmonic (SH) basis functions, which provides a compact representation, and avoids the CPU/processing intensive stage of temporal alignment used by previous solutions. Experimental results show that the proposed approach can well retrieve the motions, and is capable of retrieve logically and numerically similar motions, which is superior to previous approaches. The user study shows that the proposed system can be a useful tool to input motion query if the users are familiar with it. Finally, an application of generating a 3D animation from a hand-drawn comics strip is demonstrated.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Journal on Computing and Cultural Heritage
                J. Comput. Cult. Herit.
                Association for Computing Machinery (ACM)
                1556-4673
                1556-4711
                January 10 2020
                January 10 2020
                : 12
                : 4
                : 1-27
                Affiliations
                [1 ]University of Cyprus and RISE Research Center, Nicosia, Cyprus
                [2 ]The Interdisciplinary Center Herzliya, Herzliya, Israel
                Article
                10.1145/3344383
                a6c76c20-1824-454e-92bc-7f9961175092
                © 2020

                http://www.acm.org/publications/policies/copyright_policy#Background

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