h a l f b a k e r yYeah, I wish it made more sense too.
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One way to really, *really* learn good martial-arts form
would be to put a teacher in a motion capture suit, and
then wire up the students in similar suits...but lined
throughout with little "shock beads" that instantly let them
know when they are deviating from the kata/form being
taught.
That is, if a leg is too low or an arm is misplaced-
a regional-bzzzt! Nothing painful, and the graduated
electrical shock would, according to my psychology text,
lessen, then vanish as the student learned. Probably quite
quickly! I wouldn't be surprised if there might be a way to
stimulate the nerves in a way that would place the
wayward limb in the proper position...maybe not. But you
could record martial-arts masters and replicate their form
electronically for resale. Same for any physical
movements, really. Dance, for example. Visions of a
square-dance class gone horribly wrong suddenly appearing
in my head.
Geeez, here's a link to a robotic suit
http://i.gizmodo.co...ersion-to-cost-4200 Apply this gizmo to Skrewloose's idea? [cloudface, Apr 10 2009]
[link]
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I was ready for a robotic suit to force the user into the correct position. Could you wire it into the muscles in order to twitch them into the correct position, rather than simply dog-training the students? |
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This sounds like a very good way to get lots and lots of
strained muscles. Most adult beginners, even those in very
good shape, are not going to have the range of motion of a
master instructor. And the several students in their 70s to
90s in my DoJang are unlikely to reach that range ever.
For that matter my instructor doesn't have the range of
motion some of the kids do, so you'd be artificially limiting
them as well. |
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bigsleep: Gee, Pavlov's dancing shoes are really close, aren't
they? My bad. Skrewloose's idea is also better in a way--a
robotic suit that kind of gently positions you the correct
form. Might be good for Yoga, too! MechE: Right. I'm
guessing that there would have to be a filter that would allow
for limited range of movement. And the possibility that the
instructor wouldn't have an ideal range of movement never
occurred to me. I guess if you had a synthesized instructor
that was somehow tailored to an individual's physiology... |
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