“What is OUV” revisited

A computational interpretation on the statements of outstanding universal value

Journal Article (2021)
Author(s)

Nan Bai (TU Delft - Heritage & Values)

P Nourian Ghadikolaee (TU Delft - Design Informatics)

Renqian Luo (University of Science and Technology of China)

Ana Pereira Roders (TU Delft - Architectural Engineering +Technology)

Research Group
Design Informatics
Copyright
© 2021 N. Bai, Pirouz Nourian, Renqian Luo, A. Pereira Roders
DOI related publication
https://doi.org/10.5194/isprs-annals-VIII-M-1-2021-25-2021
More Info
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Publication Year
2021
Language
English
Copyright
© 2021 N. Bai, Pirouz Nourian, Renqian Luo, A. Pereira Roders
Related content
Research Group
Design Informatics
Issue number
M-1-2021
Volume number
VIII-M-1-2021
Pages (from-to)
25-32
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Abstract

The Statements of Outstanding Universal Value (OUV) concerns the core justification for nominating and inscribing cultural and natural heritage properties on the UNESCO World Heritage List, ever since 2007. Ten criteria are specified and measured independently for the selection process. The 2008 ICOMOS Report “What is OUV” has been a successful example to interpret OUV as an integral concept by inspecting the associations of the selection criteria in all inscribed properties. This paper presents a novel methodology for interpreting OUV using computational techniques of Natural Language Processing, Machine Learning, and Graph Visualization. Firstly, frequent phrases appearing in Statements of OUV are used to construct a lexicon for each selection criterion; Secondly, three similarity matrices are constructed as graphs to represent the pair-wise associations of the criteria; Lastly, the lexicon and graphs are visualized in 2D. The study shows that the lexicon derived from computational techniques can capture the essential concepts of OUV, and that the selection criteria are consistently associated with each other in different similarity metrics. This study provides a quantitative and qualitative interpretation of the Statements of OUV and the associations of selection criteria, which can be seen as an elaborated computational extension of the 2008 Report, useful for future inscription and evaluation process of World Heritage nominations.