Receive a weekly summary and discussion of the top papers of the week by leading researchers in the field.

In Applied ergonomics

To design high-quality head/face-related products for children, it is essential to be able to construct 3D geometric models of their head growth patterns and variations. However, compared to 3D anthropometric analysis of adults' heads, this is still an underexplored research area. This study developed a framework for modeling the 3D geometric growth patterns and sex-specific variations of children's heads. To analyze these variations, the entire heads of 793 children (395 females and 398 males) ages 5-17 were scanned, and one global and two sex-specific statistical shape models (SSMs) were constructed. The first principal component in these SSMs, contributing more than 65% to the total explained variations, was highly related to overall head sizes. To model growth patterns, expected average heads for different ages and per-vertex growth rates were computed. Our results showed that the entire female head basically reaches its mature size at age 13-14, whereas in males it continues to increase until age 16-17. This study therefore provides valuable references for children's head/face-related product design, including the development of a more accurate sizing system and improvements in product fit and function.

Zhang Jie, Fu Fang, Shi Xinyu, Luximon Yan

2022-Nov-24

“Childrens head modeling”, Head growth patterns, Head variations analysis, Statistical shape modeling