2024 - 2029
In corso
Progetti internazionaliArcheologia
Gabriele Gattiglia (PA – Metodologia della Ricerca Archeologica)
Francesca Anichini (TA - Docente di Archeologia Contemporanea - Università di Pisa) Federico Cantini (PO – Archeologia Medievale . Università di Pisa) Niccolò Mazzucco (PA – Archeologia Preistorica – Università di Pisa) Simonetta Mencelli (PA – Topografia Antica – Università di Pisa) Claudia Sciuto (RTD-A - Metodologia della ricerca archeologica – Università di Pisa) Nicola Trabucco (TA – Docente di Montaggio Video – Università di Pisa) Holly Wright (Researcher – Data Management - University of York) Ivan Tyukin (Professor - Mathematical Data Science and Modelling – King’s College London) Kay Salas Rosenbach (Directeur adjoint aux affaires internationales – INRAP) Amala Marx (Ingénieur de recherche - INRAP) Leore Grosman (Professor – Archeologia preistorica – Hebrew University of Jerusalem) Remy Chapouile (Professeur des Universités - Milieux denses et matériaux – Université Bordeaux Motaigne) Xavier Granier (Professeur - Optics and Computer Science - Institut d'Optique Graduate School) Ivan Radman (Director - Archaeological Museum in Zagreb Antonio Bicchi (Senior Researcher – Robotics – Istitituto Italiano di Tecnologia) Fabio Bonomi (CEO – qbrobotics) Nevio Dubbini (CEO – Minigful srl) Gian Giuseppe Simeone (Executive Manager – Culture Lab)
English version
Objects connect us to memories and experiences. They possess biographies that reveal their human relationships. This is why archaeologists focus on material culture, gathering countless archaeological finds to preserve what we can learn and the stories they create for current and future generations. Archaeology unlocks these stories, enabling objects to speak about their origins, uses, and evolution. They offer insights into technology, daily life, relationships, the environment, and human history. Pottery and lithics are common forms of archaeological evidence, holding crucial information. However, documenting and classifying these finds is labour-intensive, it limits our understanding of these objects. While digitisation campaigns have been undertaken, they remain complex, time-consuming, and costly, leaving millions of artefacts inaccessible. AUTOMATA will transform this process by enabling low-cost and time-efficient digitisation. Using AI-augmented robotics and sensors, AUTOMATA will create 3D models enriched with archaeometric data, providing a practical and cost-effective solution for digitisation. Robotic tools with newly developed AI methodologies will improve the digitisation process of visible and non-visible properties of archaeological finds, enhance the robustness and efficiency of 3D digitisation, improve surface appearance acquisition, and integrate 2D representations. This approach streamlines data acquisition, aided by human-AI collaboration, and, in turn, the collection of big, well-identified data will empower the development of AI models. This cost-effective technology will democratise access to digitisation, benefiting museums and smaller institutions, aid preservation methods and restorers’ work, and foster inclusive knowledge-sharing via a dedicated crowdsourcing platform. Finally, the data collected by AUTOMATA will ensure seamless integration of data into the ECCCH Cloud and facilitate data sharing and innovative usage strategies by CCIs.