“…The result is a precise and accurate XROMM animation of 3D bone meshes moving in 3D space (Brainerd et al, 2010;Gatesy et al, 2010). Over the past 8 years, researchers have used XROMM to study in vivo skeletal motion in numerous behaviors and species including: terrestrial locomotion of alligators , dogs (Wachs et al, 2016), rats (Bonnan et al, 2016) and birds (Kambic et al, 2014(Kambic et al, , 2015; arboreal locomotion of sloths (Nyakatura and Fischer, 2010); jumping in frogs (Astley and Roberts, 2012) and humans (Miranda et al, 2013); feeding in pigs (Menegaz et al, 2015), ducks (Dawson et al, 2011), geckos (Montuelle and Williams, 2015) and fish (Camp and Brainerd, 2015;Gidmark et al, 2012); flight in bats (Konow et al, 2015) and birds Heers et al, 2016;Heers and Dial, 2012); lung ventilation in iguanas ; and trackway formation in theropod dinosaurs (Falkingham and Gatesy, 2014). Methods include marker-based XROMM, in which radio-opaque markers are surgically implanted into skeletal elements (Brainerd et al, 2010;Tashman and Anderst, 2003), and markerless XROMM, which includes manual scientific rotoscoping and semi-automated bone model registration methods (Banks and Hodge, 1996;Miranda et al, 2011;You et al, 2001).…”