The research group from University of Calgary (Canada) informed about the creation of a first-ever spatial model of a human body.
Development received the name 4D CAVEman. The model “is in the air” in a room of a virtual reality in which the image is formed with the help of the projector systems built in walls and a floor.
The team consisting of programmers, biologists, mathematics and designers, worked above the creation of a model for more than six years - the purpose was to develop the most detailed existing anatomic atlas.
CAVEman completely repeats the structure of a human body, and each its detail can be increased and displayed if necessary in a convenient perspective.
The basic systems and organs for the videoatlas are transformed into animated three-dimensional models by computer painters.
Christoph Synsen, the head of the development asserts that the resolution of an anatomic atlas CAVEman is a lot better, than at all existing models.
Scientists hope that this development will be adopted in modern surgery and diagnostics, and also will help researches in other areas of medicine, for example, in massage therapy, informs ScienceDaily.





Related posts: