Virtual Dictionary
Passive Marker MoCap
Passive marker MoCap, or Motion Capture, works via optical tagging. Markers coated with a special paint that is retroreflective ? a special kind of reflective that returns most light back to its source only.
The camera recording the MoCap has a powerful backlit light source that the tags pick up on. Their relative brightness far outshines that returned from skin, or clothing. Non retroreflective metal is also not as bright ? it scatters evenly, rather than returning all to the light source.
The result is a captured two-dimensional image of the person?s body movements, in each camera. Three dimensions are achieved via the software, isolating the relative brightness of the tags, and extrapolating relative distance from that. Multiple camera views are then combined, to gain a true 3D perspective.
Below, we offer a selection of links from our resource databases
which may match this term.
Related Dictionary
Entries for Passive Marker MoCap:
Resources
in our database matching the Term Passive Marker MoCap:
Results by page [1] [2] [3]
Swift MoCap Sequence Retrieval

A better way has been developed for premade MoCap summoning. A method that uses general limb movements to call up the closest matching MoCap file.
MoCap for Movement Analysis

Promising work by QuinteQ on real-time motion capture without excessive hardware, holds promise for MoCap use in public VR.
Combining MoCap and Gesture Recognition

MoCap - Motion Capture - for all its impressive abilities, has definite limitations in terms of sensory fidelity, the expense and bulk of the rig. Gesture control is cheap and captures every little movement, but easily overwhelmed. Is a hybrid system possible?
Lessons from Simone: MoCap Filter

Simone is a seminal virtual reality film, and there are several aspects of both the technology of VR and the social impact, which the film carries off very well, and which deserve to stand on their own merits. The MoCap filter the film alludes to, is one such aspect.
Large Image Display: Animatrix: Final Flight of the Osiris: Facial Detail

This frame is from the widescreen version of ?Final Flight of the Osiris?, one of the Animatrix animated shorts. It has been considerably scaled back from the original material. Still, it exists to showcase the state of CG faces back in 2003. At least the CG possible when interactive VR techniques are applied to a passive VR production. In the years since this animation short came out, normal passive CG specialists have caught up. The question we ask here is, how come it took four years for them to catch up?
Industry
News containing the Term Passive Marker MoCap:
Results by page
(11/09/2006)
Rubbish bins all over the UK are upgrading, becoming the eyes and ears of their local councils. At least 500,000 wheelie bins now use passive RFID tagging.
Electronic, passive RFID tags about the size of a one-pence piece ar...
(02/09/2009)
Malignant brain tumors often fail to respond to promising new medication. Researchers in Heidelberg have discovered a mechanism and a tumor marker for the development of this resistance. A "death receptor" can possibly provide information...
(16/06/2009)
A robot designed to work in space should ideally be a Jack of all trades, with the ability to perform a wide variety of tasks by itself. By having one robot that can handle many jobs, astronauts can cut down on weight in order to reduce lau...
(18/07/2013)
University of Leicester study shows insects can move without muscles using ‘clever biomechanical tricks’
Neurobiologists from the University of Leicester have shown that insect limbs can move without muscles – a finding that...
(28/10/2008)
MicroCHIPS is a US firm dedicated to biochip usage, not just by dropping blood on a biochip in a doctor's office, but implanted into your skin both for drug delivery via a slowly degrading biological matrix, and to continuously monitor you...