Interfacing Jack and anybody : towards anthropometric musculoskeletal digital human modeling


Autoria(s): Paul, Gunther; Lee, Woon Chung
Data(s)

2011

Resumo

Virtual prototyping emerges as a new technology to replace existing physical prototypes for product evaluation, which are costly and time consuming to manufacture. Virtualization technology allows engineers and ergonomists to perform virtual builds and different ergonomic analyses on a product. Digital Human Modelling (DHM) software packages such as Siemens Jack, often integrate with CAD systems to provide a virtual environment which allows investigation of operator and product compatibility. Although the integration between DHM and CAD systems allows for the ergonomic analysis of anthropometric design, human musculoskeletal, multi-body modelling software packages such as the AnyBody Modelling System (AMS) are required to support physiologic design. They provide muscular force analysis, estimate human musculoskeletal strain and help address human comfort assessment. However, the independent characteristics of the modelling systems Jack and AMS constrain engineers and ergonomists in conducting a complete ergonomic analysis. AMS is a stand alone programming system without a capability to integrate into CAD environments. Jack is providing CAD integrated human-in-the-loop capability, but without considering musculoskeletal activity. Consequently, engineers and ergonomists need to perform many redundant tasks during product and process design. Besides, the existing biomechanical model in AMS uses a simplified estimation of body proportions, based on a segment mass ratio derived scaling approach. This is insufficient to represent user populations anthropometrically correct in AMS. In addition, sub-models are derived from different sources of morphologic data and are therefore anthropometrically inconsistent. Therefore, an interface between the biomechanical AMS and the virtual human model Jack was developed to integrate a musculoskeletal simulation with Jack posture modeling. This interface provides direct data exchange between the two man-models, based on a consistent data structure and common body model. The study assesses kinematic and biomechanical model characteristics of Jack and AMS, and defines an appropriate biomechanical model. The information content for interfacing the two systems is defined and a protocol is identified. The interface program is developed and implemented through Tcl and Jack-script(Python), and interacts with the AMS console application to operate AMS procedures.

Formato

application/pdf

Identificador

http://eprints.qut.edu.au/49085/

Relação

http://eprints.qut.edu.au/49085/1/A2179_Interfacing_Jack_and_Anybody_Gunther_Paul.pdf

http://iea-dhm2011.univ-lyon1.fr/en/pages/dhm2011-home

Paul, Gunther & Lee, Woon Chung (2011) Interfacing Jack and anybody : towards anthropometric musculoskeletal digital human modeling. In 1st International Symposium on Digital Human Modelling, 14-16 June 2011, Université Claude Bernard, Lyon.

Direitos

Copyright 2011 [please consult the author]

Fonte

Biogeoscience; Faculty of Health; Institute of Health and Biomedical Innovation

Palavras-Chave #Biomechanical Modelling #Digital Human Modelling (DHM)
Tipo

Conference Paper