HCOct 14, 2020

Underwater Augmented Reality for improving the diving experience in submerged archaeological sites

arXiv:2010.07113v147 citations
Originality Synthesis-oriented
AI Analysis

This addresses the challenge for tourists and archaeologists in underwater environments, but it is incremental as it applies existing AR concepts to a new domain.

The paper tackled the problem of limited visibility and lack of explanations for divers in submerged archaeological sites by developing underwater Augmented Reality (UWAR) technologies, showing they could improve comprehension of the site and its remains.

The Mediterranean Sea has a vast maritime heritage which exploitation is made difficult because of the many limitations imposed by the submerged environment. Archaeological diving tours, in fact, suffer from the impossibility to provide underwater an exhaustive explanation of the submerged remains. Furthermore, low visibility conditions, due to water turbidity and biological colonization, sometimes make very confusing for tourists to find their way around in the underwater archaeological site. To this end, the paper investigates the feasibility and potentials of the underwater Augmented Reality (UWAR) technologies developed in the iMARECulture project for improving the experience of the divers that visit the Underwater Archaeological Park of Baiae (Naples). In particular, the paper presents two UWAR technologies that adopt hybrid tracking techniques to perform an augmented visualization of the actual conditions and of a hypothetical 3D reconstruction of the archaeological remains as appeared in the past. The first one integrates a marker-based tracking with inertial sensors, while the second one adopts a markerless approach that integrates acoustic localization and visual-inertial odometry. The experimentations show that the proposed UWAR technologies could contribute to have a better comprehension of the underwater site and its archaeological remains.

Foundations

The foundational work for this paper's niche, ranked by how specifically the neighbourhood builds on it — not by global fame.

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