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Grand Challenge Competition Provides Rich Data Set to Improve Joint Contact Force Predictions
There are numerous musculoskeletal modeling methods available to make predictions of muscle and joint contact forces. While such predictions can help improve treatments for movement-related disorders...
knee
Jan, 02, 2012
Computational Biomechanics: Making Strides Toward Patient Care

Moving from intuition to evidence-based intervention

To understand how muscles contract and joints flex, researchers have dissected cadavers and experimented with animals. They can describe how bones, muscles, and tendons connect in a complicated...
Jan, 01, 2007
Simbios: Bringing Biomedical Simulation to Your Fingertips

How Simbios' state-of-the-art software tools are contributing to high-impact biomedical research

Simbios began with a simple idea: that physics-based simulation of biological structures at all scales could benefit from a unified tool-building effort.   At the same time, the thinking went,...
Oct, 01, 2009
Imaging Collections: How They're Stacking Up

As barriers to massive imaging collections fall, researchers can look at human systems in their entirety rather than in pieces

In the beginning there was the Visible Human. It broke new ground by gathering some 2,000 serial images from a death row inmate’s cadaver, and was the first time researchers had sectioned a...
Jul, 01, 2007
Reverse Engineering the Brain
For a century, neuroscientists have dissected, traced, eavesdropped on, and are now compiling a seemingly endless cast of players in the nervous system. As we keep gathering more and more molecular...
neuron, reverse engineer
Apr, 01, 2009
OpenSim User Profile: B.J. Fregly, PhD

University of Florida’s B.J. Fregly hopes to use OpenSim to simulate the knee.

from http://biomedicalcomputationreview.org/content/simbios-bringing-biomedical-simulation-your-fingertips   B.J. Fregly, PhD, associate professor of mechanical and aerospace engineering and of...
Oct, 01, 2009
BCATS: Not Your Usual Biomedical Computation Conference

Students, not faculty, are the ones in charge

Outwardly, the Biomedical Computation at Stanford (BCATS) conference resembles other academic conferences: Researchers converge to hear about the latest developments in their field and to...
Jan, 01, 2008
Recognizing and Encouraging Timely Dissemination
The availability of free and open access data, models, and software indisputably accelerates scientific progress. Unfortunately, dissemination necessitates organization, documentation, and quality...
Jan, 01, 2010
Journey to the NIH: Insights and Inspirations from the 2012 NCBC Showcase

Postdocs get a glance at the entire field and their first inside view of NIH grant-making

If he were a graduate student now, Francis Collins would be studying computational biology. That’s what the Director of the National Institutes of Health (NIH) told a rapt audience at the...
Feb, 19, 2013
OpenSim User Profile: Jill Higginson, PhD

Jill Higginson at the University of Delaware uses OpenSim to study stroke.

from http://biomedicalcomputationreview.org/content/simbios-bringing-biomedical-simulation-your-fingertips   Jill Higginson, PhD, assistant professor of mechanical engineering at the University...
Oct, 01, 2009
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