
Working Group Progress for IEEE P3141 - Standard for 3D Body Processing, 2018-2019 - 19.185
C. McDonald et al., "Working Group Progress for IEEE P3141 - Standard for 3D Body Processing, 2018-2019", in Proc. of 3DBODY.TECH 2019 - 10th Int. Conf. and Exh. on 3D Body Scanning and Processing Technologies, Lugano, Switzerland, 22-23 Oct. 2019, pp. 185-195, doi:10.15221/19.185.
Title:
Working Group Progress for IEEE P3141 - Standard for 3D Body Processing, 2018-2019
Authors:
Carol MCDONALD 1, Alfredo BALLESTER 2, Randy K. RANNOW 3, Maxim FEDYUKOV 4, Inga DABOLINA 5
1 Gneiss Concept, Washougal, WA, USA;
2 Instituto de Biomecanica, Universitat Politecnica de Valencia, Valencia, Spain;
3 Silverdraft Supercomputing, Boise, ID, USA;
4 Texel, Moscow, Russia;
5 Institute of Design Technologies, RTU, Riga, Latvia
Abstract:
The 3D Body Processing (3DBP) Industry Connections Working Group, an adjunct group of IEEE P3141, Draft Standard for 3D Body Processing (3DBP), brings together diverse entities devoted to making recommendations for 3D body processing interoperability between creators and consumers of 3D body models. Members are mainly related to the apparel, footwear and accessories industry and include large retailers, scanner providers, data processors, hardware solutions providers, virtual fit providers, small start-ups and universities.
This paper summarizes the main activities conducted during the past year and provides an overview of the topics to be addresses in 2020. During 2019, the working group published two white papers focused on File Formats and Communication, Security and Privacy (CSP). The group conducted Phase 1 and 2 of a comparative study of full body using different anthropometric measuring methods including traditional and digital (including phone apps).
Details:
Full paper: 19185mcdonald.pdf
Proceedings: 3DBODY.TECH 2019, 22-23 Oct. 2019, Lugano, Switzerland
Pages: 185-195
DOI: 10.15221/19.185
License/Copyright notice:
Proceedings: © Hometrica Consulting - Dr. Nicola D'Apuzzo, Switzerland, hometrica.ch.
Authors retain all rights to individual papers, which are licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
The papers appearing in the proceedings reflect the author's opinions. Their inclusion in the proceedings does not necessary constitute endorsement by the editor or by the publisher.
Note: click the + on the top left of the page to open/close the menu.