Provide Your Feedback to Improve the OpenSim ProjectWe've created a short survey to get your feedback on how to improve the OpenSim software and training resources and enhance our community. Your input will help shape the OpenSim project going forward. If you complete the survey by February 5, you will also have the chance to win one of three $50 Amazon Gift Cards.
Complete the SurveyApply to the NCSRR/OpenSim Visiting Scholars ProgramSummer 2016 at Stanford UniversityApplications are due on February 5, 2016
The National Center for Simulation in Rehabilitation Research (NCSRR) is now accepting applications for the 2016 Visiting Scholars Program. The program is a unique experience that fosters expertise and collaborations in biomechanical simulations for rehabilitation research. Up to four individuals will be chosen to visit the NCSRR at Stanford University for a 5-week period during the summer of 2016.
Read more and learn how to apply.
Toolbox for Processing Motion Capture Data Shared by University of Padova ResearchersAlice Mantoan, Monica Reggiani, and colleagues recently
published "MOtoNMS: A MATLAB toolbox to process motion data for neuromusculoskeletal modeling and simulation" in Source Code for Biology and Medicine. MOtoNMS processes experimental data from C3D files of different motion analysis devices and produces input data for OpenSim (.trc and .mot files). You can find their paper, along with the MATLAB code, test data, and a user guide, on their
Simtk.org project page.
New Model of the Shoulder Joint Complex Available for DownloadAjay Seth (Stanford University), Ricardo Matias (University of Lisbon), and colleagues have developed and validated a newly published model of the scapulothoracic joint. The
publication in PLOS One, "A biomechanical model of the scapulothoracic joint to accurately capture scapular kinematics during shoulder movements," describes the model. They provide the OpenSim model, software (plugin), and data on their
Simtk.org project page.