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Computer science group develops software for Olympic swim team

by Leah Carliner
'07-'08 Life Editor

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Computer science students Samir Roy and Jean Honorio are working with the U.S. Olympic Swimming Team.
Media Credit: Sam Sherraden
Computer science students Samir Roy and Jean Honorio are working with the U.S. Olympic Swimming Team.

They may not be the best athletes or have the biggest muscles, but some members of GW's Computer Science Department could hold the keys to the gold medal for the U.S. Olympic swimming team.

Professor James Hahn, chair of the Computer Science Department, along with graduate students Samir Roy and Jean Honorio, have developed a software program that can capture a swimmer's movement underwater in three dimensions. This software will allow swimmers and their coaches to closely observe every motion made underwater in order to improve strokes.

Hahn said the software was developed specifically for the U.S. Olympic swimming team because they have been the primary source of data and funding.

The group recently finished the delivery of the prototype and is now waiting for feedback from the U.S. Olympic swimming team to put the finishing touches on the final product.

"(This) software will take swimming video analysis to an entirely new level," said Russell Mark, a biomechanics coordinator for the USA Swimming-National Team Division who has been working closely with the GW group, in an e-mail. "Software that is currently available is capable of performing (two-dimensional) video analysis (using video that can be taken with a regular video camera). (This) software takes that concept, and adds a third dimension that will give us ... a much more powerful and telling video tool."

Honorio said, "What we have done is to actually take a laser scan so we have a prototypical man and we then change his measurements to a particular man."

The project began with Rajat Mittal, an associate professor of engineering and applied sciences, who was studying a different type of swimmer.

"Back in about 2003 I got a research project from the U.S. Navy to develop fish swimming, to understand the water flow around swimming," he said.

After the Navy project was finished, Mittal approached the U.S. Olympic swimming team to see if they wanted to use his research on swimmers instead of fish.

"At that point I thought it would be useful to bring in professor Hahn because he has had experience with graphics."
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