Anthropometric data are often described in terms of percentiles and too often digital human models are synthesised from such data using a single percentile value for all body dimensions. The poor correlation between body dimensions means that products may be evaluated against models of humans that do not exist. Alternative digital approaches try to minimise this difficulty using pre-defined families of manikins to represent human diversity, whereas in the real world carefully selected real people take part in ‘fitting trials’. HADRIAN is a digital human modeling system which uses discrete data sets for individuals rather than statistical populations. A task description language is used to execute the evaluative capabilities of the underlying SAMMIE human modelling system as though a ‘real’ fitting trial was being conducted. The approach is described with a focus on the elderly and disabled and their potential exclusion from public transport systems.
History
School
Design
Citation
CASE, K. ... et al, 2009. HADRIAN: fitting trials by digital human modelling. IN: Duffy V.G. (ed.). Digital Human Modeling: Proceedings of the 2nd International Conference ICDHM 2009, held as part of HCI International 2009, 19th-24th July 2009, San Diego, CA, pp. 673 - 680