Topic: Motion Capture (Mocap)
Research Outline
Main argument: Motion Capture is as necessary to animate as animators.
A lot of animation uses exaggerations in movement to communicate more clearly which may not come from motion capture, but a lot of live action realistic visual effects can conveniently get much needed realistic movement from motion capture technology.
demand
*
cost
* increasing affordablility
What are the general types of products or fields of study that use Motion capture
Major companies involved in motion capture
specific movies, games, or other products known for motion capture, and what role or purpose it had. (supporting evidence)
Summary on how motion capture works, with diagrams and other visual aids.
The outdated and earliest forms of motion capture and how it evolved to the present day most cutting edge innovations.
Methodologies
equipment price/performance levels and types.
motion capture job/integration with visual effects companies. (support evidence)
Specialties with in Motion Capture.
Conclusion/ closing.
Currently used motion capture that was pretty successful.
Key ideas about motion capture's impact on the market and society.
Is motion capture an effective innovation. is it break-through or progressive.
It captures real movemnts that is useful in more than just entertainment media.
Motion Capture is more effective and flexible than previous techniques that are trying to achieve the same goals. realistic motion etc.
- Location of Mt. Everest
- Geography of the Surrounding Area
- Facts about Mt. Everest
- Height of the mountain
- How the mountain was named
- Peak XV
- Joloungma (Tibetan name)
- Sagarmatha (Nepalese name)
- The number of people who have climbed Everest to date
- Sir Edmund Hillary
- First to reach the summit (1953)
- Led a team of experienced mountain climbers who worked together
- Tenzing Norgay and the Sherpas
- Norgay was an experienced climber and guide who accompanied Hillary
- Sherpas still used to guide expeditions
- Rob Hall
- Leader of the failed 1996 expedition
- Led group of (mainly) tourists with little mountain climbing experience
- The Impact Expeditions have had on Mt. Everest and Local Community
- Ecological Effects
- Loss of trees due to high demand for wood for cooking and heating for tourists.
- Piles of trash left by climbing expeditions
- Economic Effects
- Expedition fees provide income for the country
- Expeditions provide work for the Sherpas, contributing to the local economy.
- Cultural Effects
- Introduction of motor vehicles
- Introduction of electricity
- Conclusion
- Example 1:
Example Outline For Case Study
I. Introduction
- A. thesis: the main argument
- B. subarguments
- 1. shape of the content
- 2. how everything interconnects
- A. argument/paragraph 1
- 1. state the argument, in context of overall thesis
- 2. evidence, support, examples
- 3. tie off the argument
- 1. state the argument, in context of overall thesis and previous argument (transition)
- 2. evidence, support, examples
- 3. tie off the argument
- 1. state the argument, in context of overall thesis and previous argument (transition)
- 2. evidence, support, examples
- 3. tie off the argument
- A. draw all the arguments together to show how they support the thesis
- B. make some broader speculations about the significance of it all
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