Webinar: Computational Models of Reaching to Test Hypotheses in Motor Control
February 11, 2020 at 10:00 a.m. Pacific Standard Time
We invite you to join us for a webinar featuring Mazen Al Borno from Stanford University. In this webinar, Dr. Al Borno will highlight his computational experiments to elicit a new understanding of 1) the relationship between movement speed and accuracy, known as the speed-accuracy tradeoff, and  2) the feasibility of muscle synergies, represented by a low-dimensional controller, to produce the rich and flexible behaviors seen in everyday movements. Learn more and register 

Model of the Guinea Fowl Pelvic Limb Available on SimTK

Past OpenSim Visiting Scholar Suzanne Cox from Pennsylvania State University and colleagues have developed a guinea fowl (Numida meliagris) pelvic limb model and made it freely available on SimTK for others to use. Dr. Cox, et al. utilized the model to explore how activation and tendon compliance interact to influence muscle operating lengths and force-generating capacity. Read more about their study and the model in the Integrative Organismal Biology publication. Download the model

 

 

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Joy P. Ku, PhD

Project Manager, SimTK

Director of Communications & Training, NCSRR

Director of Communications & Engagement, Mobilize Center

Stanford University

(w)  650.736.8434

Email:  joyku@stanford.edu