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Who was the better artist, a caveman or Leonardo da Vinci?
It turns out that early depictions of four-legged animals walking are more accurate in some ways than modern ones—even those crafted by the Renaissance1 master. The study is in the journal PLoS ONE.
Without fancy cameras, we two-leggers can have trouble visualizing2 the sequence of leg motion in a quadruped's gait. Hungarian scientists recently analyzed3 a thousand statues, paintings and other art created in prehistory or more recently. Specifically, the researchers checked how the legs of ostensibly moving quadrupeds hit the ground, to see if these depictions matched actual animal locomotion4.
Of course, 19th century photographer Eadweard Muybridge famously captured a horse's motion in stop-motion photographs. Artwork in the centuries prior to his photos got the legs wrong 84 percent of the time. The error rate dropped to 58 percent after his photos came out. But prehistoric5 artists topped all with just a 46 percent error rate. Perhaps those cave painters paid such close attention to detail because they wanted to avoid being starving artists.
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1 renaissance | |
n.复活,复兴,文艺复兴 | |
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2 visualizing | |
肉眼观察 | |
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3 analyzed | |
v.分析( analyze的过去式和过去分词 );分解;解释;对…进行心理分析 | |
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4 locomotion | |
n.运动,移动 | |
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5 prehistoric | |
adj.(有记载的)历史以前的,史前的,古老的 | |
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