TY - BOOK ID - 6297126 TI - Human movement understanding : from computational geometry to artificial intelligence AU - Morasso, P. AU - Tagliasco, V. PY - 1986 VL - 33 SN - 0444700323 9786611797805 1281797804 0080866875 9780080866871 9780444700322 9781281797803 6611797807 PB - Amsterdam ; New York : New York : North-Holland ; Sole distributors for the U.S.A. and Canada Elsevier Science Publishing Co., DB - UniCat KW - Human mechanics KW - Kinesiology KW - Artificial intelligence KW - Research KW - Technique KW - Mathematical models KW - Kinetics. KW - Models, Biological. KW - Movement. KW - 612.8 KW - -Human mechanics KW - -Kinesiology KW - -Cinesiology KW - Motor ability KW - Body mechanics, Human KW - Human biomechanics KW - Human movements KW - Movements, Human KW - Animal mechanics KW - Human physiology KW - Physical anthropology KW - AI (Artificial intelligence) KW - Artificial thinking KW - Electronic brains KW - Intellectronics KW - Intelligence, Artificial KW - Intelligent machines KW - Machine intelligence KW - Thinking, Artificial KW - Bionics KW - Cognitive science KW - Digital computer simulation KW - Electronic data processing KW - Logic machines KW - Machine theory KW - Self-organizing systems KW - Simulation methods KW - Fifth generation computers KW - Neural computers KW - Movements KW - Motion KW - Biological Model KW - Biological Models KW - Model, Biological KW - Models, Biologic KW - Biologic Model KW - Biologic Models KW - Model, Biologic KW - Zenuwstelsel. Zintuigen. Motorische neurowetenschappen KW - -Technique KW - -Zenuwstelsel. Zintuigen. Motorische neurowetenschappen KW - Kinetics KW - Models, Biological KW - Movement KW - Cinesiology KW - Research&delete& KW - Artificial intelligence. KW - Mathematical models. KW - Technique. KW - Human mechanics - Research - Technique KW - Kinesiology - Research - Technique KW - Human mechanics - Mathematical models UR - https://www.unicat.be/uniCat?func=search&query=sysid:6297126 AB - The volume applies to the study of the motor system the computational approach developed by David Marr for the visual system. Accordingly, understanding movement is viewed as an information processing problem, centred on the representation of appropriate computational structures. In particular, the book deals with the representation of objects, concurrent parallel processes, trajectory formation patterns and patterns of interaction with the environment.A number of modeling techniques are discussed, ranging from computational geometry to artificial intelligence, integrating very differe ER -