Cultural big data: nineteenth to twenty-first century panoramic visualization

Front Big Data. 2024 Nov 8:7:1309887. doi: 10.3389/fdata.2024.1309887. eCollection 2024.

Abstract

From the nineteenth-century panorama to the emergence of the digital panoramic format in the 1990's, the visualization of large images frequently relies on panoramic viewing strategies. Originally rendered in the form of epic painted canvases, these strategies are now amplified through gigapixel imaging, computer vision and machine learning. Whether for scientific analysis, dissemination, or to visualize cultural big data, panoramic strategies pivot on the illusion of immersion. The latter is achieved through human-centered design situated within a large-scale environment combined with a multi-sensory experience spanning sight, sound, touch, and smell. In this article, we present the original research undertaken to realize a digital twin of the 1894 panorama of the battle of Murten. Following a brief history of the panorama, the methods and technological framework systems developed for Murten panorama's visualization are delineated. Novel visualization methodologies are further discussed, including how to create the illusion of immersion for the world's largest image of a single physical object and its cultural big data. We also present the visualization strategies developed for the augmentation of the layered narratives and histories embedded in the final interactive viewing experience of the Murten panorama. This article offers researchers in heritage big data new schemas for the visualization and augmentation of gigapixel images in digital panoramas.

Keywords: 3D augmentation; battle of Murten; big data; cultural history; data visualization; gigapixel image; media archaeology; panorama.

Grants and funding

The author(s) declare financial support was received for the research, authorship, and/or publication of this article. The first phase of the DIAGRAM project between 2022 and 2023 has been supported by Loterie Romande, Municipality of Murten, Canton of Fribourg, Federal Office for Culture, the Association of the Friends of the Panorama, and the Foundation Etrillard. Phase OneTM is a sponsor for this project. The second phase between 2024 and 2026 was supported by the Stiftung für Kunst, Kultur und Geschichte, UBS Culture Foundation, Swiss National Science Foundation, Ernst Göhner Stiftung, Foundation Etrillard, and Association Suisse pour l'Histoire et les Sciences Militaires.