Research & Development

Posted by Jessica Driscoll, Bronnie McCarthy on , last updated

Civilisations is a new nine-part series, airing in the Spring, which will tell the story of human civilisation through art from prehistory to the present. A re-imagination of Kenneth Clark’s landmark series ‘Civilisation’ from the 60’s, the scope will be truly global; from ancient Rome to Iran, from China to Mexico, themes like creation, the human body and colour will be explored.

As part of the Culture UK initiative, BBC R&D are collaborating with BBC Arts to offer the museum sector, galleries and libraries a number of exciting opportunities to be involved in the programme. Through offering them exclusive access to a suite of digital tools (two BBC-made and two licensed from third party suppliers), more than 700 BBC Archive materials, and a wealth of R&D expertise, we are hoping to guide them in creating new, innovative digital content that will complement the programme. The experiences they make will be trialled on BBC Taster, our public-facing platform for experiments, or their own websites. We are also asking museums to contribute content for a new augmented reality (AR) app, which will launch alongside the series.

Our team have been travelling the UK, hosting a number of workshops to demonstrate how the tools work from a user perspective, but also what the audience will experience from the final pilot. We hope that the Museum sector will take full advantage of trialling with new ways of storytelling. We are also attending the Museums Association Conference later this week, to ensure we’re reaching museums far and wide with this unique opportunity.

So, what are the tools?

BBC R&D - Culture UK

BBC R&D - Sharing technology with the arts and museum sector

BBC R&D - Partnerships

Storylines
Storylines is a tool that allows you to create glossy, visually-led scrolling timelines incorporating a wide range of assets, including video, audio, gifs, images and text documents. The tool will enable museums and galleries to tell stories using their existing assets, as well as a selection of content from the BBC archive, in a new and exciting way.

Storylines - Glossy, visually-led scrolling timelines.

Museums will be able to use their existing content without having to commit to dedicated development resource, as they only need to provide a minimum of six pieces of material in order to create a really beautiful experience. Timelines are a popular way of giving context, and will help in explaining the history behind museums’ collections and the individual artefacts; we’ve also found through trials with BBC News that they are very popular with our audiences.

BBC Taster VR App
We’re trialling a 360 Interactive Video tool using a third party platform called EEVO. This allows storytellers to create immersive experiences. One of the challenges that cultural organisations face is how to truly immerse their audiences in their collections - for example, many collections are often related to times past or perhaps are in remote locations or inaccessible to a wide audience. There has been a recent trend towards 360 video for cultural subjects but for many who have experienced content in this medium, it’s been found that a more interactive experience would be much more engaging.

Screenshot of a Planet Earth II 360 video experience

Through the EEVO tool, the story instantly becomes more compelling, through the use of hotspots, branching narrative, and 3D audio features, as users have to interact with it and can choose their own path through the experience.  Stories are brought to life, in a way that traditional 360 video has not previously allowed, and takes the user into the heart of the experience. The experiences made will live on the BBC Taster VR app (iOS | Android) and will allow us to trial the impact of this type of content on a wide, public audience.

BBC R&D - 360 Video and Virtual Reality

BBC R&D - An Introduction to BBC Reality Labs

BBC Media Centre - BBC launches first augmented reality app

SeenIt
We’re also trialling a user-generated video collaboration tool called SeenIt. This allows users to create authentic videos at scale, by actively engaging with their communities and audiences and making them contributors. It’s a unique tool that we’ve been testing to see if user generated content (UGC) on a topic can make for a compelling story, as well as spark conversation.

SeenIt - Turning the audience into content creators via an easy to use mobile app for structured video capture

A set of challenges or tasks are set for these contributors, which act as prompts for filming. Their footage is then sent via the app to the SeenIt Studio, where a producer can collect, curate, edit and publish the user-generated content as part of a wider story. By using broadcast messages, the producer creates a running dialogue with the contributors and makes the task more conversational; this two way interaction creates a relationship between contributor and participant that is often not present in traditional forms of broadcasting.

SOMA
SOMA Live Capture is a browser based vision mixer, which lets you mix between any number of cameras, pre-recorded video, audio and graphics for live broadcast from a remote location, via the internet, at low cost.

IP Studio

Built by BBC R&D, this tool enables remote live editing using R&D’s IP Studio infrastructure and we’ve already been trialling it through BBC R&D networks at large events, such as the Edinburgh Festival. SOMA takes out the need of all the costly equipment and staff used for a traditional broadcast - outdoor broadcast trucks, producers, directors, large camera crews etc and will allow the BBC to cover more smaller scale, niche events for our audiences. Museums will have the opportunity to use this to live broadcast small events, talks and panel discussions within the festival period where possible.

What about the AR App?

Civilisations - AR App

Another digital opportunity we are offering to the museum sector is the chance to be involved in creating content for an AR app, which will launch alongside the series. We’re currently building the framework with a company called Nexus after they successfully completed an Invitation to Tender process, and we hope to reuse this framework for projects in the future. The Civilisations AR app will feature items from museums that are related to themes from the series. These items will have been 3D scanned and interactive layers of discovery will be embedded within the objects. Users will be able to explore and inspect the artefacts up close with friends and family in the comfort of their own home through the use of through-camera marker-less tracking. We’ll be writing more about the AR app in a future blog post, so keep an eye out for that.

What are the benefits?
The benefits to our museum and gallery partners are numerous. Museums will receive advice and training from BBC R&D experts. Support will centre on cutting edge technologies, such as 3D scanning and interactive 360 video production to create unique content, giving them the opportunity to upskill their own teams where necessary. Another aim of the project is also to provide legacy content; this content could be used for conservation, marketing and outreach by the organisations on a variety of platforms. Speaking of platforms, BBC Taster will give museums the chance to reach a new, young and international audience.

What will we gain from this?
One of the most important opportunities for us in R&D is that the project will give us a number of chances to validate our tools in the real world, in real life use cases. We’ll be able to test the impact of the tools and their subsequent experiences, allowing us to improve them, their processes, and understand what works well (and not so well) with the audience.

R&D often trial third party tools, to explore new innovative formats that aren’t currently being worked on within the department; this project is the perfect opportunity to do just that. There will be further opportunities to collaborate with us in the new year through Connected Studio, as we consider new licensable technology formats under the theme of participation. To stay up-to-date with our news, please sign up to our mailing list.

Overall, it’s a really exciting project to be involved in and we can’t wait to see what participants create. Watch out for our next blog post in the coming months, which will feature some of the content that’s being produced as well as a closer look at the making of the AR experience.

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BBC Connected Studio - Civilisations & the Museum Sector

BBC R&D - IP Studio: Lightweight Live

BBC R&D - Building a Live Television Video Mixing Application for the Browser

BBC Arts - Civilisations Festival

Culture UK

Arts Council of Northern Ireland

Arts Council of Wales

Arts Council England

Creative Scotland

This post is part of the Future Experience Technologies section

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