The IRMA Community
Newsletters
Research IRM
Click a keyword to search titles using our InfoSci-OnDemand powered search:
|
Implementing AI in Heritage Tourism: Balancing Access and Preservation
Abstract
Cultural heritage represents the cumulative legacy of human creativity, history, and identity, encompassing tangible artifacts such as monuments, museums, archaeological sites, and historical architecture, as well as intangible elements like traditions, rituals, and folklore. Preserving and promoting heritage while ensuring broad accessibility is a significant challenge in an increasingly globalized and digital world. Physical visits are often constrained by geographic distance, travel costs, physical mobility limitations, and environmental or socio-political factors. (Ayeh et al., 2013). AI-powered virtual tours for remote heritage access offer a transformative approach, combining artificial intelligence, 3D modeling, immersive media, and adaptive learning technologies to enable interactive, personalized, and highly engaging cultural experiences for audiences worldwide. These systems democratize access to heritage, enhance educational outcomes, foster cultural appreciation, and support sustainable tourism while minimizing environmental impact on fragile heritage sites.
Related Content
|
Frederic Andres.
© 2027.
14 pages.
|
|
Kalsoom Safdar, Khairul Najmy Abdul Rani, Mohd Aminudin Jamlos, Siti Julia Rosli, Muhammad Usman Younus, Zanab Safdar.
© 2027.
27 pages.
|
|
Bani Adam, Binastya Anggara Sekti, Muhammad Adi Zacky Zahran.
© 2027.
24 pages.
|
|
Swetha Margaret T. A., Renuka Devi D..
© 2027.
31 pages.
|
|
Maurice Saluschke, Michael Schulz.
© 2027.
30 pages.
|
|
Mirjam Sepesy Maučec, Gregor Donaj.
© 2027.
16 pages.
|
|
Jorge A. Ruiz-Vanoye, Ocotlan Diaz-Parra, Ricardo A. Barrera-Cámara, Alejandro Fuentes-Penna, Francisco R. Trejo-Macotela, Jaime Aguilar-Ortiz, Eric Simancas-Acevedo.
© 2027.
21 pages.
|
|
|