Historically, people have used stopwatches, cameras or trained eyes to assess walking and its deficits. However, recent technological advances such as motion capture, wearable sensors and data science ...
Reps Deputy Spokesperson Philip Agbese says President Tinubu’s swift directive on contractor payments averted a looming ...
7hon MSNOpinion
How we rebuild courage following New York's betrayal
It hurts to see the city I love lose its moral compass. The Jewish story has never ended with pain – it always turns toward ...
United Progressive Kinabalu Organisation’s (Upko) decision to quit Pakatan Harapan (PH) has sent ripples across Sabah ...
There is talk of regime change in Venezuela. US military aircraft are flying missions out of El Salvador. About 10,000 ...
Te Pāti Māori is down two MPs after expelling Mariameno Kapa-Kingi and Tākuta Ferris, following several turbulent months that ...
Unity's Vector AI platform is accelerating growth and margins, making the stock a bullish opportunity. Read here for more ...
In a new JNeurosci paper, Kahori Kita and colleagues at Johns Hopkins University explored how people switch between intuitive motor skills they know and newly learned movement patterns.
The way an actor physically inhabits a character? A model’s distinctive runway walk? Credit a movement director, who can make ...
Researchers from Skoltech, the University of Potsdam, and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology have discovered a ...
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