Abstract
Museums have adapted their traditional ways of providing services with the advent of novel digital technologies to match up with the pace and growing needs of current industry revolution. Mixed Reality has revitalized interpretation of numerous domains by offering immersive experiences in digital and real world. In the proposed study, an attempt was made to enrich user's museum experience with relevant multimedia information and for building a better connection with the artifacts with in Taxila Museum in Pakistan, which has beautifully preserved the Gandhara civilization. The proposed solution is an Augmented Reality (AR)-based smartphone application which recognizes artifacts using Deep Learning in real time and retrieve supportive multimedia information for the visitors. To provide user with exact content, convolutional neural networks (CNN) will be applied to correctly recognize artifacts. The significance of proposed application is compared with traditional human guided or free user tours through user-centric questionnaire-based survey. The evaluation is carefully performed using relevant evaluation models including Museum Experience Scale (MES) and triptych model of interactivity. The findings of the study are discussed and assessed comprehensively using statistical methods to highlight its significance.