PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Disney Research software systems add motion to physical characters

Even non-experts can breathe life into linkage-based and planar mechanical figurines

2014-08-08
(Press-News.org) New 3D printing techniques have made it possible for just about anybody to fabricate fanciful plastic characters and sculptures, two new computational design methods developed by Disney Research Zurich are making it possible for even casual users to bring these creations to life by adding mechanical motion.

The methods apply to two specific types of characters – planar mechanical characters that are similar to shadow puppets, and linkage-based characters formed by networks of rigid links and hinged joints. In either case, the researchers have developed tools that lead the user in designing mechanisms that will achieve a desired cyclical motion, whether it be a dragon flapping its wings or a ballerina executing a pas de chat.

The same team of researchers, including scientists from Disney Research Zurich, ETH Zurich and Columbia University, developed both methods and will present them at ACM SIGGRAPH 2014, the International Conference on Computer Graphics and Interactive Techniques, Aug. 10-14, in Vancouver, Canada. The work was also presented at SCA 2014, the Symposium on Computer Animation, July 21-23 in Copenhagen, Denmark.

"The machinery for fabricating personalized mechanical toys, artifacts and even robots is becoming widely available, thanks to 3D printing," said Bernhard Thomaszewski, a Disney Research Zurich associate research scientist. "But without the assistance of specialized software, designing such animated characters is a virtually impossible task for casual users."

At SCA 2014, the team presented ChaCra, their interactive system for designing planar mechanical characters. These are inspired by classic shadow puppets -- rigidly articulated characters whose motion is controlled through a number of rods. In these characters, however, the rods aren't controlled by a puppeteer behind a screen, but are animated by a single actuator.

Users can sketch the body parts and pose them as desired; ChaCra then automatically computes the mechanical structure required to move the character to achieve those poses. The process is quick; the researchers found it took only a few minutes to design several sample characters.

Stelian Coros, a Disney Research Zurich research scientist, said the team was able to make the design process manageable by building each structure from three simple mechanisms – connectors that define relative motion between two components, trimmers that limit motion to a desired range, and propagators that transmit actuation from it source to the extremities. Each of these building blocks consists of two interconnected bars for which it is easy to set parameters.

At ACM SIGGRAPH 2014, the team will present a design system for linkage-based characters and kinetic sculptures, in which networks of rigid members and simple joints not only animate the structure, but become part of the work of art. The kinetic sculptures of such artists as Werner Gergaut and Andrew Chase inspired this approach.

"Despite the fact that the linkages are made from very basic components, they can create complex and often surprising motions," Coros said.

The team's process begins with a design for a mechanical structure in which the motion of every joint is controlled by a motor – a design that is impractically complex and expensive, but which enables the designer to freely configure the desired motion. The design tool enables the user to then successively replace the joint motors with new rigid links that mechanically couple the motions of different parts of the assembly.

Such an approach would be tedious and frustrating if done manually, but proved to be enjoyable with the design tool, Thomaszewski said. The tool not only makes this easier, but also enables the user to explore a number of possible configurations of linkages that can better approximate the desired motion while avoiding pitfalls that could cause the mechanism to grind to a halt.

INFORMATION: In addition to Thomaszewski and Coros, the team included Disney Research Zurich director Markus Gross, Damien Gauge and Vittorio Megaro of ETH Zurich and Eitan Grinspun of Columbia. For more information and for videos, visit the project web sites at http://www.disneyresearch.com/project/linkage-based-characters/.

About Disney Research Disney Research is a network of research laboratories supporting The Walt Disney Company. Its purpose is to pursue scientific and technological innovation to advance the company's broad media and entertainment efforts. Vice Presidents Jessica Hodgins and Markus Gross manage Disney Research facilities in Los Angeles, Pittsburgh, Zürich, and Boston and work closely with the Pixar and ILM research groups in the San Francisco Bay Area. Research topics include computer graphics, animation, video processing, computer vision, robotics, wireless & mobile computing, human-computer interaction, displays, behavioral economics, and machine learning.


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Disney Research method automatically edits footage from cameras into coherent videos

2014-08-08
Video cameras that people wear to record daily activities are creating a novel form of creative and informative media. But this footage also poses a challenge: how to expeditiously edit hours of raw video into something watchable. One solution, according to Disney researchers, is to automate the editing process by leveraging the first-person viewpoints of multiple cameras to find the areas of greatest interest in the scene. The method they developed can automatically combine footage of a single event shot by several such "social cameras" into a coherent, condensed video. ...

Living organisms in oil

2014-08-08
Oil might not, at first sight, seem like an inhabited terrain. Within the oil, however, are tiny, suspended water droplets. "Inside them we found complex microbial communities, which play an active part in oil degradation in situ," says first author Prof. Rainer Meckenstock from the Helmholtz Zentrum München (HMGU). Previously it was assumed that microbial oil degradation only occurred at the oil-water interface. The team headed by Prof. Meckenstock from the Institute of Groundwater Ecology and the Department of Biogeochemistry at HMGU along with international colleagues ...

Disney Research's interactive method synchronizes multiple videos

2014-08-08
Disney Research Zurich has developed a new tool to help video editors synchronize multiple video clips based on the visual content of the videos, rather than relying on timecodes or other external markers. Current editing tools include a "snapping" interface that aligns video clips based on start-and-end times; by contrast, Disney Research's VideoSnapping method is based on an analysis of the content of the video. This makes it easier to synchronize multiple clips without such cues as global timecodes or audio, and even when clips are shot at different trajectories and ...

Which Structure has optimal resistive switching characteristics?

Which Structure has optimal resistive switching characteristics?
2014-08-08
Resistance switching of random access memory has been widely explored due to its potential for replacement of flash memory in the next-generation nonvolatile memory applications. One of the problems with resistive switching materials is the variations of switching parameters, which will deteriorate the device endurance. How do we solve this problem? Many methods have been tried to improve the resistive switching performances, such as doping in the insulator film, using appropriate electrodes and inserting interlayer between the electrode and the insulator ...

Work-related stress is a risk factor for type 2 diabetes

2014-08-08
Workplace stress can have a range of adverse effects on health with an increased risk of cardio-vascular diseases in the first line. However, to date, convincing evidence for a strong association between work stress and incident Type 2 diabetes mellitus is missing. Risk of diabetes about 45 percent higher As the team of scientists headed by Dr. Cornelia Huth and Prof. Karl-Heinz Ladwig has now discovered that individuals who are under a high level of pressure at work and at the same time perceive little control over the activities they perform face an about 45 percent ...

Northern Pacific's tropical anoxic zone might shrink from climate change

2014-08-08
A commonly held belief that global warming will diminish oxygen concentrations in the ocean looks like it may not be entirely true. According to new research published in Science magazine, just the opposite is likely the case in the eastern tropical northern Pacific, with its anoxic zone expected to shrink in coming decades because of climate change. An international team of scientists came to that surprising conclusion after completing a detailed assessment of changes since 1850 in the eastern tropical northern Pacific Ocean's oxygen minimum zone (OMZ). An ocean layer ...

How we form habits and change existing ones

2014-08-08
Much of our daily lives are taken up by habits that we've formed over our lifetime. An important characteristic of a habit is that it's automatic-- we don't always recognize habits in our own behavior. Studies show that about 40 percent of people's daily activities are performed each day in almost the same situations. Habits emerge through associative learning. "We find patterns of behavior that allow us to reach goals. We repeat what works, and when actions are repeated in a stable context, we form associations between cues and response," Wendy Wood explains in her session ...

What does 'diversity' mean to you? The answer may depend on your race

2014-08-08
Diversity in the workplace has been a contentious issue for many employers. In May 2014, Google disclosed that 70% of its employees are male, and in terms of racial diversity, the company is 61% White, 30% Asian, 3% Hispanic and 2% Black. Does that breakdown sound diverse to you? If not, what would an ideal diverse team look like? A study publishing in Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin sheds light on the complexity in defining diversity. Previous research has shown that higher levels of diversity are associated with more trust, increased feelings of safety and ...

What's the best way to brush teeth? Even dentists and dental associations don't agree

2014-08-08
Advice on how we should brush our teeth from dental associations and toothpaste companies is 'unacceptably inconsistent', finds new UCL (University College London) research. The study, published in the British Dental Journal, looked at the brushing advice given by dental associations across ten countries, toothpaste and toothbrush companies and in dental textbooks. They found a wide range of recommendations on what brushing method to use, how often to brush and for how long. The researchers found no clear consensus between the various sources, and a 'worrying' lack ...

Study measures steep coastal costs of China's GDP growth

Study measures steep coastal costs of Chinas GDP growth
2014-08-08
PROVIDENCE, R.I. [Brown University] — A new study by a team of Chinese and American conservation biologists quantifies the serious consequences of China's recent economic growth on its coastal ecosystems. By several measures, 1978 was the beginning of a hugely successful surge in the nation's ability to produce economic value, but that surge brought accelerated degradation in the vitality of its coastal ecosystems. The combined analysis of economic growth, human activities and impacts, and environmental quality data appears in the journal Scientific Reports. It shows ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Study: First female runner could soon break the 4-minute-mile barrier

High dietary fish intake may slow disability progression in MS

UK Armed Forces servicewomen face unique set of hurdles for abortion access/care

Use of strong synthetic opioids during surgery linked to poor composite experience of pain

UK innovation to transform treatment for people with type 2 diabetes worldwide

AI model can read ECGs to identify female patients at higher risk of heart disease

Biological organ ages predict disease risk decades in advance

New manzanita species discovered, already at risk

Giant ice bulldozers: How ancient glaciers helped life evolve

Toward high electro-optic performance in III-V semiconductors

In mouse embryos, sister cells commit suicide in unison

Automatic cell analysis with the help of artificial intelligence

New study highlights need for better care to prevent lung problems after abdominal surgery

Microplastics in ocean linked to disabilities for coastal residents

Biophysical Society announced undergraduate poster award competition winners

Successful strategies for collaborative species conservation

Immune cells may lead to more Parkinson's cases in men

SCAI publishes expert consensus on alternative access for transaortic valve replacement (TAVR)

Humans inherited their flexible joints from the earliest jawed fish

Understanding the world within: Study reveals new insights into phage–bacteria interactions in the gut microbiome

Cold treatment does not appear to protect preterm infants from disability or death caused by oxygen loss, according to NIH-funded study

Pennington Biomedical researchers uncover role of hormone in influencing brain reward pathway and food preferences

Rethinking equity in electric vehicle infrastructure

Lunar Trailblazer blasts off to map water on the moon

Beacon Technology Solutions, Illinois Tech awarded grant to advance far-UVC disinfection research

University of Houston researchers paving the way for new era in medical imaging

High-tech startup CrySyst provides quality-by-control solutions for pharmaceutical, fine chemical industries

From scraps to sips: Everyday biomass produces drinking water from thin air

Scientists design novel battery that runs on atomic waste

“Ultra-rapid” testing unlocks cancer genetics in the operating room

[Press-News.org] Disney Research software systems add motion to physical characters
Even non-experts can breathe life into linkage-based and planar mechanical figurines