VIENNA, Austria, November 30, 2011 /PRNewswire/ --
Henrik Quintel is a graduate computer scientist with a vision: he has spent years of his free time working on a model that improves the understanding of brain disorders. He is supported in his ambitious task by the simulation software AMUSE from Viennese software producer LieberLieber.
In a personal discussion, Quintel very quickly outs himself as a fan of Vienna: "I actually came upon the idea for my project through the works of Sigmund Freud. He wanted to learn more about the conscious mind using psychological methods. I also make use of technical resources to learn more about the complex processes in the brain!" The aim of his project is to use a robot to present movement disorders caused by brain disorders, having previously simulated them on the computer with AMUSE (an Enterprise Architect plug-in).
The graduate computer scientist maintains close contact in this regard with the Bernstein Network. This association promotes the new discipline of "Computational Neuroscience", in which biologists, physicians, psychologists, physicists, mathematicians and computer scientists work together.
As Quintel pursues his work solely in his free time, the price/performance ratio was also decisive when choosing the resources used. As the research work grew, he started to search for simulation software. He initially came across an expensive solution, before discovering AMUSE. "This solution is extremely affordable, offers excellent simulation possibilities and vastly simplifies my work. Since 2010, they have been friendly enough to provide me with an academic licence," says a delighted Quintel.
Visit LieberLieber at the OMG Technical Meeting Exhibition: December 12-16, 2011 - Hyatt Regency, Santa Clara, CA 95054 - LieberLieber CEO Daniel Siegl would be pleased to explain all new features of AMUSE 2.0
Contact:
Ruediger Maier, LieberLieber Software,
+43-1-9072627-204; [email protected], http://www.lieberlieber.com
SOURCE LieberLieber Software
Share this article