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Gabriele Guidi

Researcher at Polytechnic University of Milan

Publications -  125
Citations -  2778

Gabriele Guidi is an academic researcher from Polytechnic University of Milan. The author has contributed to research in topics: Doppler effect & Cultural heritage. The author has an hindex of 27, co-authored 124 publications receiving 2498 citations. Previous affiliations of Gabriele Guidi include University of Florence & Instituto Politécnico Nacional.

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A Multi-Resolution Methodology for the 3D Modeling of Large and Complex Archeological Areas:

TL;DR: In this paper, a multi-resolution and multi-sensor approach was developed for the accurate and detailed 3D modeling of the entire Roman Forum in Pompei, Italy, which contains more than 350 finds spread all over the forum as well as larger mural structures of previous buildings and temples.
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3D digitizing of cultural heritage

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors briefly review the state of the art of the 3D acquisition and digitizing techniques applied to heritage, focusing on motivations, issues and technical specification of 3D digitizing of heritage artworks.
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Ground-based radar interferometry for landslides monitoring: atmospheric and instrumental decorrelation sources on experimental data

TL;DR: Results confirmed that the application of ground-based radar interferometry can be attractive and effective if the acquired SAR images maintain an adequate coherence on different dates.
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High-accuracy 3D modeling of cultural heritage: the digitizing of Donatello's "Maddalena"

TL;DR: The process of acquiring a 3D digital model of the Maddalena by Donatello, a wooden statue representing one of the major masterpieces of the Italian Renaissance which was swept away by the Florence flood of 1966, and subsequently restored is described.
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3D survey and virtual reconstruction of archeological sites

TL;DR: The aim of this paper is to describe the whole process step by step, focusing on the iterative feedback that can allow us to reach the best virtual reconstruction solutions, helping the archeologists to better focus their reasoning through a detailed visual representation, and the technological experts to avoid misleading details in the final virtual reconstruction.