This package calculates the masses, center of mass positions, and inertia tensors that correspond to the human inertia model developed by Yeadon in (Yeadon, 1990). The package allows for the input of both measurements and configuration variables (joint angles), and provides 3D visualization using the MayaVi package. See the online documentation at http://yeadon.readthedocs.org/.
M. R. Yeadon, 1990. The Simulation of Aerial Movement-ii. Mathematical Inertia Model of the Human Body. Journal of Biomechanics, 23:67-74.
yeadon/
contains the python source files for the yeadon package.doc/
contains source documents for building sphinx documentation.misc/
contains figures and template input files.misc/samplemeasurements/
contains sample measurement input files.
This package was developed for Python 3.7+.
yeadon depends on the following widely-used packages:
- setuptools for installation
- NumPy for computations
- PyYAML for parsing input files
The following packages are optional:
- MayaVi for visualization and GUI interaction
- nose for tests
- Sphinx to create documentation
- numpydoc Sphinx extension for NumPy-style documentation formatting
Most scientific python distributions provide all of these dependencies and it is often easiest to install one of them to get started. Once you have a distribution, you can install the yeadon package. This is the best solution for Windows users.
In some operating systems, the dependencies can also be obtained from the operating system's package manager. For example, in Debian systems, you should be able to obtain all of these packages by opening a terminal window and typing:
$ # prepend sudo to each line below if you desire a system install $ apt-get install python3-setuptools python3-numpy python3-yaml # required $ apt-get install python3-nose python3-sphinx python3-numpydoc mayavi2 # optional packages
For other operating systems (e.g. Windows or Mac), visit the websites for the packages for installation instructions.
This option is required if you want to use yeadon in a virtualenv. You can build the dependencies from source and then install them by using a tool like pip:
$ python -m pip install numpy PyYAML $ python -m pip install nose sphinx mayavi $ python -m pip install numpydoc
or you can obtain the source code, perhaps from GitHub, and install the packages manually.
Once you've obtained the dependencies, you can install yeadon. The easiest way to download and install the yeadon package is by using a tool like pip to obtain the package from the Python Package Index (PyPi):
$ python -m pip install yeadon # sudo if system install
You can also obtain an archive of the package at the Python Package Index (https://pypi.python.org/pypi/yeadon), and then install the package on your own by executing the following from the root directory of the package:
$ python setup.py install # sudo if system install
On Unix, you can obtain the package source code and install it without leaving your terminal:
$ # change X.X.X to the desired version $ wget https://pypi.python.org/packages/source/y/yeadon/yeadon-X.X.X.tar.gz $ tar -zxfv yeadon-X.X.X.tar.gz $ cd yeadon-X.X.X.tar.gz $ python setup.py install # sudo if system install
Run the tests with:
$ python setup.py nosetests
You can build the yeadon HTML documentation if you have Sphinx by typing the following from the root directory of the yeadon source files:
$ cd doc/ $ make html
You can open the documentation in your favorite web browser:
$ firefox _build/html/index.html
If you have a LaTeX distribution installed you can build the LaTeX docs with:
$ cd doc/ $ make latexpdf
and view the document with your preferred PDF viewer:
$ evince _build/latex/yeadon.pdf
Note that to generate documentation, one also needs the numpydoc package. Alternatively, one can just access the documentation through the PyPi site.
Once the package is installed you can start the program with:
$ yeadon
If you have MayaVi installed, the GUI will launch. If you don't, the text based UI will launch. You can explicitly specify whether you want to load the GUI or the UI with command-line flags:
$ yeadon --gui $ yeadon --ui
You can also interact with yeadon in a Python interpreter session or Python script/module via the API by importing the package. For example:
$ python >>> import yeadon
Now you can create a human object with:
>>> human = yeadon.Human(<measfilename>, <CFGfilename>)
where <measfilename> and <CFGfilename> are replaced by strings that contain a relative or absolute path to the appropriate input .txt files. For more basics on how to use a Human object, you can go into a python command prompt and type:
>>> help(yeadon.Human)
or see the documentation.
You can also start the UI or the GUI from within a Python interpreter by executing:
>>> yeadon.start_ui()
or:
>>> yeadon.start_gui()
See the documentation for more information.
If you make use of the yeadon software we would welcome a citation in your publications. Please cite this software paper:
Dembia C, Moore JK and Hubbard M. An object oriented implementation of the Yeadon human inertia model, F1000Research 2014, 3:223 (doi: https://dx.doi.org/10.12688/f1000research.5292.1)
Feel free to contact Chris Dembia (chris530d, gmail) with any questions or comments.
All development is handled at http://github.com/chrisdembia/yeadon, including issue tracking.