• There are no items in your cart

AS/NZS 15938.2:2003

Withdrawn

Withdrawn

A Withdrawn Standard is one, which is removed from sale, and its unique number can no longer be used. The Standard can be withdrawn and not replaced, or it can be withdrawn and replaced by a Standard with a different number.

Information technology - Multimedia content description interface Description definition language

Available format(s)

Hardcopy , PDF 1 User , PDF 3 Users , PDF 5 Users , PDF 9 Users

Withdrawn date

30-06-2017

Language(s)

English

Published date

02-06-2003

€92.72
Excluding VAT

Specifies the language for defining the standard set of description tools (DSs, Ds, and datatypes) and for defining new description tools.

Committee
IT-029
DocumentType
Standard
ISBN
0 7337 5250 0
Pages
37
PublisherName
Standards Australia
Status
Withdrawn
Supersedes

1.1 Scope of this International StandardThis International Standard specifies a metadata system for describing multimedia content. It specifies the Description Definition Language (DDL) that comprises part 2 of the standard (ISO/IEC 15938-2).The goal of this part of the MPEG-7 International Standard is to specify a language that will enable MPEG-7 users and developers to:- create valid MPEG-7 description schemes and descriptors;- develop tools such as editors and parsers for processing descriptions, description schemes and descriptors;- generate refinements, extensions and modifications to the DDL.This International Standard describes the features of the DDL. It defines the syntax of the DDL constructs and datatypes and provides optional (informative) examples that illustrate the application of the DDL to the specificationand instantiation of MPEG-7 descriptions.1.2 Overview of Description Definition LanguageThis International Standard, known as the "Multimedia Content Description Interface", aims at providing standardized core technologies allowing the description of audiovisual data content in multimedia environments.This is a challenging task given the broad spectrum of requirements and targeted multimedia applications, and the broad number of audiovisual features of importance in such a context. In order to achieve this broad goal, the standard specifies:- Descriptors (D): representations of Features, that define the syntax and the semantics of each feature representation;- Description Schemes (DS), that specify the structure and semantics of the relationships between their components, which may be both Ds and DSs;- A Description Definition Language (DDL), to allow the creation of new DSs and, possibly, Ds and to allow the extension and modification of existing DSs;- System tools, to support multiplexing of description, synchronization issues, transmission mechanisms, file format, etc.The DDL forms a core part of the MPEG-7 standard. It provides the solid descriptive foundation through which users can create their own Description Schemes and Descriptors. The DDL defines the syntactic rules to express and combine Description Schemes and Descriptors. According to the definition in the MPEG-7 Requirements Document [1] the DDL is‘...a language that allows the creation of new Description Schemes and, possibly, Descriptors. It also allows the extension and modification of existing Description Schemes.’The DDL is not a modelling language such as Unified Modelling Language (UML) but a schema language to represent the results of modelling audiovisual data, i.e., DSs and Ds.The DDL must satisfy the MPEG-7 DDL requirements. It has to be able to express spatial, temporal, structural, and conceptual relationships between the elements of a DS, and between DSs. It must provide a rich model for links and references between one or more descriptions and the data that it describes. In addition, it must be platform and application independent and human- and machine-readable.(Non-normative) DDL Parser applications will be required which are capable of validating description schemes (content and structure) and descriptor data types [both primitive (integer, text, date, time) and composite (histograms, enumerated types)], against the DDL. The DDL Parsers must also be capable of validating MPEG-7descriptions or instantiations, against their corresponding validated MPEG-7 schemas (DSs and Ds).The DDL design has been informed by numerous proposals and input documents submitted to MPEG-7 since the MPEG-7 Call for Proposals in October 1998 [2]. It has also been heavily influenced by W3C's XML Schema Language [3,4,5] and the Resource Description Framework (RDF) [6].At the 51 st MPEG meeting in Noordwijkerhout in March 2000, it was decided to adopt XML Schema Language [3,4,5] as the MPEG-7 DDL. However because XML Schema language was not designed specifically for audiovisual content, certain extensions have been necessary in order to satisfy all of the MPEG-7 DDL requirements.Hence the W3C's XML Schema Language Recommendations [3,4,5] together with the MPEG-7 extensions described in this document, constitute the normative reference for the MPEG-7 DDL. Overviews of the XML Schema Language structural components and datatypes are given in Annexes A and B for informative purposes only. If Annexes A and B contradict the normative references [3,4,5] then the normative references should be usedas the definitive specification.1.3 Structure of this documentThe DDL can be broken down into the following logical normative components:- The XML Schema structural language components;- The XML Schema datatype language components;- The MPEG-7 specific extensions.The complete normative specifications for XML Schema structural and datatype components can be found in [4] and [5] respectively. This International Standard provides the normative specification of the MPEG-7-specific extensions as well as non-normative examples which provide the MPEG-7 community with a clear understanding ofthe DDL and assist with the development of valid description schemes and descriptors.The structure of the remainder of this International Standard is as follows:- Clause 5 describes the normative MPEG-7–specific extensions.- Clause 6 describes those features of XML Schema which are currently not used by MPEG-7.- Annex A provides an informative overview of the structural components of XML Schema Language.- Annex B provides an informative overview of the datatyping mechanisms within XML Schema Language.- Annex C provides the normative XML Schema which defines the MPEG-7 extensions.- Annex D contains the Patent Statements.

Standards Relationship
ISO/IEC 15938-2:2002 Identical

First published as AS/NZS 15938.2:2003.

AS ISO/IEC 15938.9-2006 Information technology - Multimedia content description interface Profiles and levels
AS ISO/IEC 15938.10-2006 Information technology - Multimedia content description interface Schema definition

Access your standards online with a subscription

Features

  • Simple online access to standards, technical information and regulations.

  • Critical updates of standards and customisable alerts and notifications.

  • Multi-user online standards collection: secure, flexible and cost effective.