Difference between revisions of "User:Mjr62"
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− | Of the MATLAB demonstrations, my favorite is the "Animating a Surface" demonstration script because I do a lot of visual art and it I think it is cool that using a computer program, it is possible to create and animate an object. In addition to just looking cool, | + | Of the MATLAB demonstrations, my favorite is the "Animating a Surface" demonstration script because I do a lot of visual art and it I think it is cool that using a computer program, it is possible to create and animate an object. In addition to just looking cool, these animations could also has applications in 3D modeling in the biomedical field such as brain mapping and organ/tumor modeling where the object in question (for example a beating heart) is moving like one would in real life. |
Latest revision as of 17:10, 21 September 2017
User page for Maya Rinehart, fall 2017, as part of EGR103.
[https://bcs.mit.edu/news-events/news/giving-robots-sense-touch Giving robots a sense of touch], Larry Hardesty , MIT News Office , 4 June 2017, accessed 17 September 2017 (Reverse-engineer the brain)
Of the MATLAB demonstrations, my favorite is the "Animating a Surface" demonstration script because I do a lot of visual art and it I think it is cool that using a computer program, it is possible to create and animate an object. In addition to just looking cool, these animations could also has applications in 3D modeling in the biomedical field such as brain mapping and organ/tumor modeling where the object in question (for example a beating heart) is moving like one would in real life.