• DocumentCode
    860869
  • Title

    Biomechanics and the cyberhuman

  • Author

    Figgins, S.

  • Volume
    22
  • Issue
    6
  • fYear
    2002
  • Firstpage
    14
  • Lastpage
    20
  • Abstract
    The first modern-day studies of the human body´s mechanics - biomechanics - were done at Wayne State University (WSU) in Detroit, Michigan, in 1939. By the late thirties cars were becoming common and so were accidents. To know how to make cars safer, engineers needed to know what the human body could take. At that time, engineers had detailed information about the mechanics of building materials like steel, wood, concrete, and glass but not the human body. Researchers dropped steel balls on the heads of cadavers to determine the amount of force necessary to crack the human skull. The methods were crude, but the resulting data were extremely useful and long lasting. In 1972, this data formed the basis for the Head Injury Criteria (HIC) adopted by the newly formed National Highway Traffic Safety Administration. Although new information is replacing the HIC, it´s still this kind of biomechanical information that engineers use to determine the safety of car designs. More recently, researchers used information on the mechanical properties of the human body to validate finite-element models of the human body. These cyberhumans can give us more information than crash-test dummies about car design safety.
  • Keywords
    automobiles; biomechanics; engineering graphics; finite element analysis; safety; accidents; biomechanics; car design safety; cyberhuman; finite-element models; Biomechanics; Building materials; Cadaver; Concrete; Glass; Humans; Road accidents; Skull; Steel; Vehicle safety;
  • fLanguage
    English
  • Journal_Title
    Computer Graphics and Applications, IEEE
  • Publisher
    ieee
  • ISSN
    0272-1716
  • Type

    jour

  • DOI
    10.1109/MCG.2002.1046624
  • Filename
    1046624