IMPORTANT DATES
Author Deadlines
Submission Deadline 8 April
Acceptance Notification by 26 April
Final Manuscripts Due 15 May

Program Deadlines
Registration Opens mid-April
Early Registration Ends 15 May
Short Courses Begin 23 May
Technical Sessions Begin 7 June

   

Archiving 2022 Conference Registration

Introduction to Blockchain for Cultural Heritage

SC02

NEW Introduction to Blockchain for Cultural Heritage
Instructor: Gaurav Sharma, University of Rochester
Level: Introductory
Duration: 2 Hours, with 15-minute break
Date: Tuesday, 24 May
Time:
    New York: 12:45 – 15:00
    Paris: 18:45 – 21:00

Benefits:
This course enables the attendee to:

  • Explain how the blockchain construction provides resistance against tampering.
  • Distinguish between centralized and distributed ledgers and highlight their pros and cons.
  • Describe the concepts of proof-of-work and proof-of-stake.
  • Explain the utility and applicability of blockchains in diverse applications.
  • Cite example applications of blockchains in cultural heritage.

Course Description: The course aims to introduce attendees to blockchains, which have recently emerged as a revolutionary technology that has the potential to disrupt a range of diverse business processes and applications. Using a concrete application setting, the course illustrates the construction of blockchains as a distributed, secure, and tamper-resistant framework for the management of transaction ledgers. Necessary background in the technologies underlying blockchains, including basic cryptographic concepts, are introduced as required. Current and emerging applications of blockchains are surveyed, including NFTs and other cultural heritage applications.

Intended Audience: Engineers, scientists, students, and managers interested in understanding how blockchains are constructed and how they can be useful in a variety of applications and business settings. The course includes an overview of necessary background information,  including cryptographic tools utilized in the blockchain; prior familiarity with these concepts is not required.

Gaurav Sharma is a professor of electrical and computer engineering and of computer science at the University of Rochester where his research spans signal and image processing, computer vision, color imaging, and bioinformatics. He has extensive experience in media security across diverse application domains. Prior to joining the University of Rochester, he was a principal scientist and project leader at the Xerox Innovation Group. Additionally, he has consulted for several companies on the development of image processing and computer vision algorithms. He holds 54 issued patents and has authored more than 195 peer-reviewed publications. He is the editor of the Digital Color Imaging Handbook (CRC Press). He served as editor-in-chief for the IEEE Transactions on Image Processing (2018–2020) and IS&T/SPIE Journal of Electronic Imaging (2011–2015). Sharma is a fellow of IS&T, IEEE, and SPIE.

Cost:
Member $ 85
Non Member $ 95
Student $ 45

For office use only:

Category
1. Short Courses
When
5/24/2022 12:45 PM - 3:00 PM
Eastern Daylight Time