2017
DOI: 10.1111/cura.12244
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Evaluation of Touchable 3D‐Printed Replicas in Museums

Abstract: The multisensory aspect of the museum, while neglected for many years, is undergoing a resurgence as museum workers have begun to push towards re-establishing the senses as a major component of museum pedagogy. However, for many museums a major roadblock lies in the need to conserve rare objects, a need that prevents visitors from being able to interact with many objects in a meaningful way. This issue can be potentially overcome by the rapidly evolving field of 3D printing, which allows museum visitors to han… Show more

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Cited by 60 publications
(59 citation statements)
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“…The slices are actually 2D images, useful for the medical purposes of the common CT scans. To obtain a 3D output, thus a polygonal mesh, the 2D images have to be processed, by applying the "Marching cubes" algorithm, after the definition of a value of radio density (expressed as Hounsfield unit) [2], [16], [17].…”
Section: Digital Acquisitionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The slices are actually 2D images, useful for the medical purposes of the common CT scans. To obtain a 3D output, thus a polygonal mesh, the 2D images have to be processed, by applying the "Marching cubes" algorithm, after the definition of a value of radio density (expressed as Hounsfield unit) [2], [16], [17].…”
Section: Digital Acquisitionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This rapid diffusion has also had consequences in the field of Cultural Heritage, and in particular in museums. The most avant-garde institutions are beginning to recognize in modern technologies a means to add new "reading" methods to the most traditional visit paths (Wilson et al, 2017, Petrelli 2013, Dudley 2010. In fact, the focus is shifting from the museum visit as we understand it, towards a multi-layered and multi-sensorial experience: more and more, modern museums place supports that allow new ways of interaction next to the works of art exhibited in traditional display cases.…”
Section: D Printing In Museumsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…3D models also offer a means of depicting archaeological features that otherwise would be far too complex to represent. 3D digitalization of skeletal remains, for example, allows the creation of replicas, and offers resources of great educational value to museums, research projects, universities and other venues (Neumüller et al 2014;Wilson et al 2017).…”
Section: Virtual Archaeology and Funerary Contextsmentioning
confidence: 99%