The paper challenges the dominant “mirror metaphor” that defines digital human twins as faithful replicas of human behavior ...
Human motion prediction and simulation represent a rapidly evolving interdisciplinary field that integrates biomechanics, computer science and optimisation techniques to develop digital human models ...
Animating human hands has long been considered one of the most challenging problems in computer graphics. That's because it has been impossible to capture the internal movement of the hand in motion - ...
Internal distractions are often unintentional, and can last from a split second to numerous minutes, and while driving, have been shown to occur most frequently during low-stimulus drives. Regardless ...
In this video from the NVIDIA GPU Technology Conference, Pedro Valero-Lara from BSC presents: The Simulation of the Behavior of the Human Brain using CUDA. “The attendees can learn about how the ...
From the outside, the simulated aerial dogfight the Pentagon held two weeks ago looked like a standard demonstration of close-up air-to-air combat as two F-16 fighter jets barreled through the sky, ...
Whatever our hands do--reaching, grabbing or manipulating objects--it always appears simple. Yet your hands are one of the most complicated, and important, parts of the body. Despite this, little is ...
A colossal simulation of the past two million years of Earth’s climate provides evidence that temperature and other planetary conditions influenced early human migration — and possibly contributed to ...
Learn about a new simulation that shows human-to-human transmission of H5N1 will become uncontainable if we miss the narrow ...
Wesley Wildman is Executive Director of the Non-Profit Research Institute, the Center for Mind and Culture, Inc. (CMAC), which conducts the Modeling Religion Project. CMAC has received funding from ...
(The Conversation) — Human simulation in action is messier than modeling bridges, but it can be a useful way for researchers to understand just why people behave the way they do. (The Conversation) — ...