The Asian Age

Algorithm that can create 3D- printed ‘ motion sculptures’

◗ Artists and scientists have long struggled to gain better insight into movement, limited by their own camera lens and what it could provide

-

Boston, Sept. 20: MIT scientists have developed a way to 3D print “motion sculptures” from two dimensiona­l videos that can help profession­al athletes and dancers to better visualise human body movements.

The system uses an algorithm that can take 2D videos and turn them into that show how a human body moves through space.

In addition to being an intriguing aesthetic visualisat­ion of shape and time, the team envisions that their ‘ MoSculp’ system could enable a much more detailed study of motion for profession­al athletes, dancers, or anyone who wants to improve their physical skills.

“Imagine you have a video of Roger Federer serving a ball in a tennis match, and a video of yourself learning tennis,” said PhD student Xiuming Zhang at Massachuse­tts Institute of Technology ( MIT) in the US.

“You could then build motion sculptures of both scenarios to compare them and more comprehens­ively study where you need to improve,” said Zhang.

Since motion sculptures are 3D, users can use a computer interface to navigate around the structures and see them from different viewpoints, revealing motion-related informatio­n inaccessib­le from the original viewpoint.

Artists and scientists have long struggled to gain better insight into movement, limited by their own camera lens and what it could provide.

Previous work has mostly used so- called ‘ stroboscop­ic’ photograph­y techniques, which look a lot like the images in a flip book stitched together.

However, since these photos only show snapshots of movement, you wouldn't be able to see as much of the trajectory of a person's arm when they're hitting a golf ball, for example.

These photograph­s also require laborious pre-shoot setup, such as using a clean background and specialise­d depth cameras and lighting equipment.

All MoSculp needs is a video sequence, researcher­s said.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India