Making a model of an ant
(Loomis Dean. n.d.)
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Making a model of an ant
(Loomis Dean. n.d.)
category is: cottagecoređ±đđ
I made a Maya Project file to begin my modelling.
I followed the provided tutorials, using smoothed cubes and combining to create a torso, legs and feet.
I selected half and deleted it, then made an arm from a cylinder.
Using a cube and six sided cylinder, I made the palm and the beginning of the fingers, I also combined the torso, arm, and leg and named the other components.
Using cylinders and the sizing tool, I made 3 fingers and a thumb and combined and connected them to the palm and the hand to the arm, named accordingly.
Using a smoothed cube, I made the head, using extrusion to make the crater for the eye, and the rim around it, before chopping it in half (to later mirror).
Started off with a shortened cylinder, used a Bezier curve to form the shape of the horn.
Used an edited smoothed cube to form the basic shape of the ear, before combining and connecting it to the head. As well as naming previous components.
Using the mirror tool, I mirrored the head, horn, and ears and combined it all together (named accordingly).
Using a smoothed cube, I formed an eyeball, duplicated it, and named them both.
I modelled a sword using 2 cubes, a smoothed cube, and a cylinder, as well as a bag. I then UV mapped all of these components, using photoshop for the bug's design.
UV mapped bug.
Bug skin png file.
I used a circle to make a floor, added lights and a camera, used a circle and mapped said camera onto it, and set it to 24 frames. I then rendered it using Arnold. Everything named accordingly.
Final rendered Bug video - Formative Assessment.
Nothing like looking at old projects to see how much youâve improved
and how kids donât realize how crappy the things they make are đ
"A pianist has to believe in telekinesis. You have to believe you have the power to move your fingers with your mind." I learned that from Phil Cohn, my piano teacher's piano teacher. Once in a while, when I was in high school, she'd arrange for me to have a masterâŠ
Recently, I came across this rather striking essay by Livejournal user celandine13. Itâs about performance - initially in the context of playing a musical instrument, but it generalizes to any learnable activity - and two views of mistake-making and self-improvement: the âerror modelâ and the âbug modelâ
The âerror modelâ is a model where mistakes are viewed as basically statistical error - where any given performance is perfect except for a bunch of random mistakes; this gives rise to a line of thinking where one can get rid of all imperfection just by training hard, and where mistakes are evidence of not having trained hard enough.
The âbug modelâ, on the other hand, is a model where mistakes are viewed more like computer software bugs, where mistakes are systematic and repeated performance will completely fail to get rid of the mistakes. Instead, it is necessary to explicitly identify whatâs going wrong and then consciously fix that.
An example of the latter from my own life: back in my school days, I had swimming classes, 1 hour per week. For whatever reason, I was completely unable to learn to swim, even after years of these classes. Until I hit upon a particular key insight: in order to push oneself in a particular direction, one must push water in the opposite direction. Upon having this insight and applying it to the various swimming moves my teachers had tried to teach me, I went from completely-unable-to-swim to pretty-good-at-swimming within a timespan of minutes. This feels like about as central an example of âbug modelâ performance one can possibly get; I was lacking a very specific insight that blocked me from learning swimming, and once I gained that insight, I had no problems learning whatsoever. Bug FIXED. In retrospect, Iâm a bit pissed that none of my teachers ever told me and instead just expected me to just instinctively figure out the purpose of the swimming moves. I had a chat with a friend some time ago, who told me that this insight was the very first thing that was taught in the swimming classes at her school - and that this was explained explicitly.
One thing that celandine13 observes in her essay is that this kind of thing, where students fail to progress because they hit a specific obstacle to understanding (e.g. things like my swimming thing, or failing to learn some mathematical concept), is very common, and that the âbug modelâ is strikingly effective at getting students past such hindrances in a way that the âerror modelâ is not. This seems particularly true for kids with learning disabilities.
This goes further; as celandine13 notices, itâs so strikingly common that behaviors that look like stupidity or laziness can in fact be fixed by identifying and addressing specific underlying issues, to the point where she recognizes that she stops thinking of people as stupid or lazy and starts questioning the validity of the âstupidâ and âlazyâ concepts.
Basically, under the âbug modelâ, the word âstupidâ unpacks to âyou're performing badly and I don't know whyâ and the word âlazyâ unpacks to âyou're not meeting your obligations and I don't know whyâ:
Once you start to think of mistakes as deterministic rather than random, as caused by "bugs" (incorrect understanding or incorrect procedures) rather than random inaccuracy, a curious thing happens. You stop thinking of people as "stupid." Tags like "stupid," "bad at ____", "sloppy," and so on, are ways of saying "You're performing badly and I don't know why." Â Once you move it to "you're performing badly because you have the wrong fingerings," or "you're performing badly because you don't understand what a limit is," it's no longer a vague personal failing but a causal necessity. Â Anyone who never understood limits will flunk calculus. Â It's not you, it's the bug. This also applies to "lazy." Â Lazy just means "you're not meeting your obligations and I don't know why." Â If it turns out that you've been missing appointments because you don't keep a calendar, then you're not intrinsically "lazy," you were just executing the wrong procedure. Â And suddenly you stop wanting to call the person "lazy" when it makes more sense to say they need organizational tools. "Lazy" and "stupid" and "bad at ____" are terms about the map, not the territory. Â Once you understand what causes mistakes, those terms are far less informative than actually describing what's happening.Â
This carries an implication: if person A uses words like âstupidâ and âlazyâ about person B, then it should be seen not as a value judgement of person B, but as a statement of person Aâs ignorance - and failure as an educator if person A is set to educate person B in any way.
I have previously fumbled towards similar ideas, (e.g. here, where I put together an argument against the validity of the laziness concept; I have seen others make similar arguments, although they have been narrower, focusing mainly on executive dysfunction ... which IMO carries a bit of a risk of making âexecutive dysfunctionâ be seen as a fancy synonym for âlazinessâ), but celandine13âČs essay does a better job of structuring and tying together these thoughts into a structured whole.
The subject seems to have a ton of ties to related subjects:
Social skills development: a lot of social skills deficiencies that are faced by autistics and other neurodiverse people tend to be things that can be mitigated (albeit not totally fixed) with a series of âbug modelâ type insights into social interactions, which makes it just tragic that the default model preferred by neurotypicals is to apply value judgements to such deficiencies, indicative of âerror modelâ thinking.
Disability in general: the realsocialskills blog, which is among the ones I follow, is mostly a giant catalog of a remarkably large number of ways/situations where very real disability is misinterpeted as laziness or other ill will, with advice for people with disabilities on how to deal with that sort of shit, and caretakers for how to avoid committing such misinterpretations. Much of it feels like trying to use âbug modelâ thinking to fix problems caused by âerror modelâ thinking.
Dating: one thing Iâve linked to a few times before is the reddit rejected-1000-times guy. One thing that is striking is that in order to get an unbroken streak of 1000 rejections in a row like that, you have to be doing something very systematically wrong, which implies that a âbug modelâ approach should be the appropriate one, yet the comment section is full of snark, insults and general nastiness, indicating that people are applying value judgement; again, this feels indicative of a misplaced âerror modelâ mindset.