Amerra's ability to animate concepts enables medical professionals to easily convey their techniques, brands and science to the world. Medical animation has proven to be an effective training tool because it's not in a print or text-constrained environment.
Audience level adaptation can be utilized for: Consumers, Patients, Physicians, Corporate Stakeholders and Global Messaging. Medical illustration aids in the visual communication of medical and scientific information. It provides extremely realistic and anatomically precise, interpretive, or even abstract ideas, and can be used effectively in all major markets.
Audience level adaptation can be utilized for:
- Consumers
- Patients
- Physicians
- Corporate Stakeholders
- Global Messaging
By working in 3D, one has ultimate control of each scene. Animations allow you to be a movie director and help our team determine the best camera angles, lighting, object types, interaction and effects in life-like scenes. It allows you to create a scene that would be impossible or too expensive to re-create using traditional methods and leaves a lasting impression with your audience.
3D Stereoscopic Animation
Due to overwhelming demand created by films such as Avatar, Amerra has adapted the technology to enhance medical visualization. Click here to learn more about 3D Stereographic Animation.
Medical Animation News
To illustrate how flu viruses can become resistant to prescription medications, an epidemiologist from Weill Cornell Medical College recently made use of a specially designed medical animation.
In medical animation, mechanics of concussion become clear 2011-12-19Created as part of a hypothetical case vignette appearing in the New England Journal of Medicine (NEJM), the medical visualization depicts how the brain shifts and rebounds within the skull during a slip-and-fall injury.
Sleep apnea can have serious side effects, medical animation explains 2011-12-16As part of an interactive, educational series sponsored by the New England Journal of Medicine, researchers recently created a medical animation depicting the mechanics of sleep apnea and a common treatment called "CPAP."
