Dr. Eva Herbst (@evacherbst) 's Twitter Profile
Dr. Eva Herbst

@evacherbst

Biomechanist and palaeontologist. nterested in functional morphology, 3D modeling, FEA, and osteoarthritis. She/Her

ID: 811229877215129600

calendar_today20-12-2016 15:20:49

2,2K Tweet

1,1K Followers

1,1K Following

Ardian Jusufi (@ardianj_lab) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Soft body models perform 🦎 "Fall Arrest Response" allowing impact energy dissipation following gliding geckos' example @AdvSciNews Advanced Intelligent Systems 📜 doi.org/10.1002/aisy.2… 🗞 linkedin.com/posts/empa_cra…

Pascal Bornet (@pascal_bornet) 's Twitter Profile Photo

An innovative 3D #gear, invented by three Japanese researchers This amazing concept gives a potential for many applications in health, robotics and many other mechanical fields Active ball joint mechanism (ABENICS) #innovation #tech ##3D #science

Sam Giles (@gilespalaeolab) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Huge thank you to The Royal Society, who are raising the stipend paid to the PhD students it funds in line with inflation, to £18150 per year (£20,410 for those in London).

Huge thank you to <a href="/royalsociety/">The Royal Society</a>, who are raising the stipend paid to the PhD students it funds in line with inflation, to £18150 per year (£20,410 for those in London).
Max Shepherd (@maxkshepherd) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Running-specific prosthetic feet ("blades") are more than just pogo sticks; a vertical force causes a non-vertical displacement. In our new TBME paper, we use shape optimization to achieve desired endpoint mechanics, make 3 feet, and test on an athlete: ieeexplore.ieee.org/document/98681…

Rob Sansom🐟 (@sansom_rob) 's Twitter Profile Photo

BAM! LOOK AT THIS. LOOK AT THIS LOVELY FOSSIL. A fully articulated tail of a Galeaspid. These critters don't have paired fins (as in jawed vertebrates i.e. your arms) as osteostracans do (another group of jawless fish), but they appear to have these interesting 'precursors'

BAM! LOOK AT THIS. LOOK AT THIS LOVELY FOSSIL. A fully articulated tail of a Galeaspid.
These critters don't have paired fins (as in jawed vertebrates i.e. your arms) as osteostracans do (another group of jawless fish), but they appear to have these interesting 'precursors'
Journal of Anatomy (@journalofanat) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Beautiful papers in Journal of Anatomy from Dr. Eva Herbst Chris Richards and Professor John R. Hutchinson How do you capture the range of motion of Salamanders (fire salamander Salamandra salamandra)? By designing some cool new methods, data processing and visualization techniques!

Professor John R. Hutchinson (@johnrhutchinson) 's Twitter Profile Photo

OK a little thread during my morning coffee. For decades, there has been the implicit/explicit assumption that the sizes of muscle attachments on archosaur limb bones reflect the muscles' sizes. This has never been tested. So we set out to. (1/n)

Jan van den Hemel (@janvandenhemel) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Daily #Blender Tip: Knife Project has been featured in a couple of Blender Secrets videos before, but recently since Blender 2.93.4 the way it works has changed, making those videos somewhat obsolete. So! Here’s the new way it works... for now :-) #b3d

Dr. Eva Herbst (@evacherbst) 's Twitter Profile Photo

New release for the Blender Myogenerator plugin (3D muscle modeling tool) with a small bug fix: github.com/evaherbst/MyoG… Also check out Jan Heres's super useful Blender mirroring add-on: github.com/HarryHeres/Ble…

Bryan Gee (@koskinonodon) 's Twitter Profile Photo

On the final #FossilFriday of 2022, it's time for my #YearInReview wrap-up on everything that happened in #temnospondyl research this year! Blog post: bryangee.weebly.com/blog/2022-in-r… Thread 👇

Dr. Eva Herbst (@evacherbst) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Thanks John and Luisa for bringing me on board for this sloth neck biomechanics project! - A bit of a delay in sharing this since I haven't opened twitter in a long time