the Interpretation of Cultural Heritage
No mentions found
This entity hasn't been tracked yet, or Iris is still building its knowledge base.
Related Articles from SNS
WhiteTesseract: Reframing the Interpretation of Cultural Heritage through XR and Conversational AI
Announce Type: replace Abstract: Cultural heritage exhibitions often struggle to sustain attention and support reflective engagement. Physical exhibitions rely on fixed interpretive aids that lack adaptability to individual backgrounds or curiosity, and their effectiveness depends heavily on a visitor's Personal Context, prior knowledge, and cultural literacy. Meanwhile, digital exhibitions prioritize convenience and accessibility but risk weakening the Physical and Social Contexts that...
From Craft Practice to Aesthetic Cognition Transmission: Workflow Cognition Translation for AI-native Intangible Cultural Heritage Education
arXiv:2606.01203v1 Announce Type: new Abstract: Intangible Cultural Heritage (ICH) education has traditionally relied on apprenticeship, embodied participation, and long-term engagement with masters, materials, and cultural environments. While these modes of transmission remain essential, they are difficult to scale. Existing digital heritage initiatives have expanded documentation and access, but often preserve artefacts, procedures, and representations of practice rather than the aesthetic...
UFC Octagon Girls get covered in red, white and blue ahead of Freedom 250 at the White House
The Octagon Girls couldn’t step foot on the White House lawn this weekend in their usual business attire, not for UFC Freedom 250. Technically they could, but where’s the pageantry in that?They needed new patriotic threads to match what is going to be a one-of-a-kind historical event. That’s what they got in the form of new red, white and blue attire that looks a lot like something Wonder Woman might wear.
Red stripes declared U.K.’s oldest art after being dismissed as a natural phenomenon
LONDON — Dismissed as a natural phenomenon for more than a century, red stripes on a rock in Wales have been found to be the oldest known prehistoric art in Britain and northwestern Europe — created by human fingers 17,100 years ago, according to new research. An international team of scientists revisited Bacon Hole, a cave near Mumbles in South Wales, to re-examine the series of red-pigmented horizontal stripes on a panel first discovered there in 1912. The markings were initially...