Societally connected multimedia across cultures

Zhongfei Zhang*, Zhengyou Zhang, Ramesh Jain, Yueting Zhuang, Noshir Contractor, Alexander G. Hauptmann, Alejandro Alex Jaimes, Wanqing Li, Alexander C. Loui, Tao Mei, Nicu Sebe, Yonghong Tian, Vincent S. Tseng, Qing Wang, Changsheng Xu, Huimin Yu, Shiwen Yu

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

1 Scopus citations

Abstract

The advance of the Internet in the past decade has radically changed the way people communicate and collaborate with each other. Physical distance is no more a barrier in online social networks, but cultural differences (at the individual, community, as well as societal levels) still govern human-human interactions and must be considered and leveraged in the online world. The rapid deployment of high-speed Internet allows humans to interact using a rich set of multimedia data such as texts, pictures, and videos. This position paper proposes to define a new research area called ‘connected multimedia’, which is the study of a collection of research issues of the super-area social media that receive little attention in the literature. By connected multimedia, we mean the study of the social and technical interactions among users, multimedia data, and devices across cultures and explicitly exploiting the cultural differences. We justify why it is necessary to bring attention to this new research area and what benefits of this new research area may bring to the broader scientific research community and the humanity.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Pages (from-to)875-880
Number of pages6
JournalJournal of Zhejiang University: Science C
Volume13
Issue number12
DOIs
StatePublished - Dec 15 2012

Funding

This paper is based on the discussions contributed by all the participants of the 2009 Connected Multimedia Workshop listed as the co-authors of this paper as a result of the collective wisdom. The workshop is supported in part by US National Science Foundation through grant IIS-0956924 and College of Computer Science and Technology of Zhejiang University, China. The follow-up workshop in 2010 held in Florence was supported in part by ACM and Microsoft Research. We are also grateful to Dr. Jie YANG of US NSF for his strong support to this effort as well as his insightful advice. Zhongfei ZHANG is also supported in part by the National Basic Research Program of China (No. 2012CB316400), ZJU– Alibaba Financial Joint Lab, Zhejiang Provincial Engineering Center on Media Data Cloud Processing and Analysis, and US NSF (Nos. IIS-0812114 and CCF-1017828).

Keywords

  • Connected multimedia
  • Social media
  • Socialcultural constraint

ASJC Scopus subject areas

  • General Engineering

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