a boy running .
a car moving.
a cat walking.
moving of a ball.
A ship sailng on water.
The second sacral segment.
The human body converts food/fuel to matter and motion, thus converting energy from mass to mass and motion.
People asked me many times whether it is reliable to use human perception to annotate motion. So what is motion? There are two possible answers. First, motion is the physical movement of pixels, and therefore motion has to be measured in a physical way. Second, motion is human percept--motion is what we perceive in our brain, something we can sense and communicate. Look at the following two examples. Do you perceive any motion in Figure 1? Of course, you see a circle is moving along a circular orbit. But is there any pixel moving in Figure 1? As we slow down the motion in Figure 2, we don't see any pixel moving. In fact, this stimulus was composed by a rotating spotlight shining on a dark surface. So physically, no pixel moves, but we cannot deny the fact that something is moving. Also, we want to build a computer vision system that can "perceive" the motion of the circle. If the ultimate goal of computer vision is to let the computer see what humans perceive, then it is certainly the right way to let humans teach computer how to see the world. Our human-assisted motion annotation serves exactly for this purpose. Indeed, we shall show you that (a) humans' annotations are very consistent, and (b) human's annotations are consistent with other ground-truth data.
Torso is an anatomical term for the central part of the many animal bodies (including that of the human) from which extend the neck and limbs. It is sometimes referred to as the trunk. The torso includes the thorax and abdomen.
Yes; air resistance.
A human can interact with a computer either with the keyboard, the mouse or any special unit that can control the computer with human motion.
The front.
An anatomical study of human growth focuses on how the body's structure and organization change over time, from birth to adulthood. Physiologically, it would examine the mechanisms and processes involved in growth, such as hormone regulation, cellular division, and tissue development. Together, these studies provide a holistic understanding of how humans grow and develop throughout their lifespan.
patellar
The second sacral segment.
The human figure and motion.
For example: A alive human is in motion and a dead human is something not in motion.
Flesh, figure, and anatomical frame can substitute for human body. If you are talking about a dead human body, you can use the word corpse.
palms out front up it is a universal positions for anyone studying the human body
John Lizars has written: 'A system of anatomical plates of the human body' -- subject(s): Human anatomy, Atlases
Charles H. Ward has written: 'Catalogue of human and comparative skeletons, osteological specialties, and anatomical models' -- subject(s): Anatomy, Anatomical specimens, Catalogs
There are a few anatomical differences between the digestive system of a human and a frog. The first is that there are no villi in the small intestine of a frog. Frogs also have very weak teeth. The GI tract of the human and frog are also very different.