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Female Models For Poser Software: Discover the Amazing Features and Benefits of PoseMy.Art



Early versions of Poser were bundled with fully clothed humanoid figures specifically designed for Poser. As the program evolved, add-on packages of human figures were sold by the manufacturer of Poser, and eventually, third-party companies began creating figures which work with Poser. As clothing became separate from the humanoid figure, collections of 3D garments were created for specific models which conform to the shape and pose of the Poser figure. 'Poses' for figures were packaged and sold by the software vendor and by third parties. 'Morphs', allowing customization of body or face shape or other features, are also sold. Different skin textures, frequently combined with settings for morph technology, are marketed to allow one base model to be customized into many different 'characters'. Similarly 'texture' packages allow one garment to take on many different appearances, an animal to represent different breeds of the same species or a vehicle to show many different color schemes.


Poser's specially designed figures are commonly known as Poser Figures, Poser Models, Poser Content, Digital Actors, or Digital Puppets. Early versions of Poser were bundled with fully clothed humanoid figures specifically designed for the then-current version of Poser. Next, add-on packages of human figures were sold by the manufacturer of Poser. Soon, third party companies began creating figures which work with Poser. As clothing became separate from the humanoid figure, collections of 3D garments were created for specific models which conform to the shape and pose of the Poser figure. 'Poses' for figures were packaged and sold by the software vendor and by third parties. 'Morphs' allowing customization of body or face shape or other features are also for sale. Skin textures, frequently combined with settings for morph technology, are marketed to allow one base model to be customized into many 'characters'; similar 'texture' packages allow one garment to take on many appearances, an animal to represent different breeds of the same species, or a vehicle to show many colour schemes.




Female Models For Poser Software



Poser is a 3D rendering software package for the posing, animating and rendering of 3D polymesh human and animal figures. Akin to a virtual photography studio, Poser 3D allows the user to load figures, props, lighting and cameras for still and animated renderings. Poser is a popular tool for hobbyist artists and illustrators, and is typically used to create original images featuring human figures. Artists use Poser for human renderings of medical and industrial design illustrations, editorial illustrations, information graphics, graphic novel illustrations and comics. In this post we have added best Poser 3D models for your inspiration. I hope you like these poser models


EconPapers FAQ Archive maintainers FAQ Cookies at EconPapers The RePEc blog The RePEc plagiarism page International Journal of Forecasting1985 - 2023Current editor(s): R. J. HyndmanFrom ElsevierBibliographic data for series maintained by Catherine Liu (Obfuscate( 'elsevier.com', 'repec' )).Access Statistics for this journal.Track citations for all items by RSS feedIs something missing from the series or not right? See the RePEc data check for the archive and series.Volume 4, issue 4, 1988 Apples, oranges and mean square error pp. 515-518 Chris Chatfield Forecasting competitive behavior: An assessment of AT&T's incentive to extend its U.S. network pp. 521-533 Peter J. Grandstaff, Mark E. Ferris and Shuh S. Chou A system wide approach to forecast the demand for business toll services pp. 535-544 Malcolm Mung Forecasting and loss functions pp. 545-550 Robert Fildes and Spyros Makridakis Forecasting manpower demand and supply: A model for the accounting profession in Canada pp. 551-562 Edward B. Harvey and K. S. R. Murthy Dominant tracking signals pp. 563-572 John O. McClain Pitfalls in simulation-based evaluation of forecast monitoring schemes pp. 573-579 Arnold L. Sweet and James R. Wilson Forecasting the daily federal funds rate pp. 581-591 Scott Hein and Raymond E. Spudeck Forecasting discount window borrowing pp. 593-603 Donald Dutkowsky and William G. Foote Models of exchange rates: A comparison of forecasting results pp. 605-607 Christian Wolff Bayesian statistics two: Proceedings of the second Valencia international meeting on Bayesian statistics: J.M. Bernardo, M.H. DeGroot, D.V. Lindley and A.F.M. Smith (eds.), 6-10 September, 1983 (North-Holland, Amsterdam, 1985) pp. 770, $75 pp. 609-611 Mike West The Michigan model of world production and trade: Theory and application: Alan V. Deardoff and Robert M. Stern, (MIT Press, Cambridge, Massachusetts and London, 1986) pp. 272, $32.50, [UK pound]29.25 pp. 611-613 W. Milo and P. Tomozyk Basic issues in econometrics: Arnold Zellner, (The University of Chicago Press, Chicago and London, 1984) xxi + 334pp., [UK pound]42.75, $48.00 pp. 614-616 Frederick (Rick) van der Ploeg The electronic Oracle computer models and social decisions: Donella H. Meadows and J.M. Robinson, (Wiley, 1985) pp. 462, $48.95, [UK pound]29.95 pp. 616-617 Sam Cole A regional econometric forecasting system: Major economic areas of Michigan: Harold T. Shapiro and George A. Fulton, (University of Michigan Press, Ann Arbor, 1983) $35 pp. 618-620 W. Milo and P. Tomozyk Simulated solutions plus: (Version 1.3 - $295: demo $25) Enfin Software Corp., 6920 Miramar Rd., Suite 106-A, San Diego, CA 92121, (619) 549-6606. Requirements: Lutos 123 version 2 or 2.01, or symphony versions 1 through 1.2. Not copy-protected pp. 621-623 John F. Kottas and Jack Dittrick Easy caster: TMS Systems, Inc., 2803 Mt. Vernon Lane, Blacksburg, VA 24060, 703-552-5685. List price $295.00. requirements: IBM-PC, XT, AT and IBM - PC compatible machines pp. 623-625 Peg Young The performance of UK exchange rate forecasters: David Blake, Michael Beenstock and Valerie Brasse, Economic Journal 96 (1986) 986-999 pp. 627-629 Michael Beenstock Time-varying parameters and the out-of-sample forecasting performance of structural exchange rate models: Christian C.P. Wolff, Journal of Business & Economic Statistics 5 (1987) 87-97 pp. 629-630 Christian Wolff Methods for national population forecasting: A review: Land, Kenneth, Journal of the American Statistical Association 81 (1986) 888-901 pp. 631-632 Kenneth Land Who forecasts better?: Herman O. Stekler, Journal of Business and Economic Statistics 5 (1987) 155-158 pp. 631-631 Herman Stekler Forecasting property takes: A comparison and evaluation of methods: Terri A. Sexton, National Tax Journal 15 (1987) 47-59 pp. 632-633 Terri A. SextonVolume 4, issue 3, 1988 Communication of research on forecasting: The journal pp. 321-324 J. Armstrong The future of forecasting pp. 325-330 Everette Gardner and Spyros Makridakis Judgmental aspects of forecasting: Needs and possible trends pp. 331-339 Baruch Fischhoff New product forecasting models: Directions for research and implementation pp. 341-358 Vijay Mahajan and Yoram Wind On the future of macroeconomic forecasting pp. 359-362 Stephen K. Mcnees On the relative worth of recent macroeconomic forecasts pp. 363-376 Richard Ashley A move toward scenario analysis pp. 377-388 William R. Huss Future developments in forecasting: The time series connexion pp. 389-401 Keith Ord Proposals for research in time series forecasting pp. 403-410 Kenneth O. Cogger The future of the time-series forecasting pp. 411-419 Chris Chatfield Forecasting market prices pp. 421-426 Stephen J. Taylor Modelling and forecasting reliability pp. 427-447 David Belsley Research needs in forecasting pp. 449-465 J. Scott Armstrong Metaforecasting: Ways of improving forecasting accuracy and usefulness pp. 467-491 Spyros Makridakis The great depression of 1990: Ravi Batra, (Simon and Schuster, New York, 1985) pp. 235, $14.95 pp. 493-495 J. Armstrong Mastering change: Leon Martel, (Simon and Schuster, New York, 1985) pp. 336, $17.95 pp. 495-496 Steven P. Schnaars Modelling financial time series: Stephen Taylor, (Wiley, 1986) pp. 268, $34.95, [UK pound]19.95 pp. 496-497 Gordon Gemmill The modern forecaster: The forecasting process through data analysis: Hans Levenbach and James P. Cleary, (Van Nostrand Reinhold, 1984) pp. 450, $36.95 pp. 498-499 John Kling The manager's guide to business forecasting: Michael Barron and David Targett. (Blackwell, Oxford and New York, 1985) pp. 230, $39.95, [UK pound]15.00 pp. 498-498 Keith Ord Economic forecasting for business: John J. McAuley. (Prentice-Hall, Englewood Cliffs, New Jersey, 1986) pp. 400, $40 pp. 499-500 Stephen Silver A guide to forecasting for planners and managers: Raymond E. Willis (Prentice-Hall, Englewood Cliffs, New Jersey, 1987) pp. 404, $36.63 pp. 501-502 William Copulsky Software reviews pp. 503-508 C. Chatfield and M. Yar Journal of business and economic statistics 5: Garcia-Ferrer, A. et al., Macroeconomic forecasting using pooled international data, (1987), 53-67 pp. 509-510 Robert Fildes Management science: Lawrence, M.J., R.H. Edmunson and M.J. O'Connor, The accuracy of combining judgmental and statistical forecasts, 32 (1986), 1521-1532 pp. 510-511 Robert Fildes Journal of business: Lupoletti, William M. and Roy H. Webb, 1986, Defining and improving the accuracy of macroeconomic forecasts; contributions from a VAR model, 59, 263-284 pp. 511-512 Robert Fildes Journal of business and economic statistics: Lutkepohl, Helmut, Forecasting vector ARMA processes with systematically missing observations, 4 1986, 375-390 pp. 513-513 Robert Fildes Organizational behavior and human decision processes: Wagenaar, Willem A. and G.B. Keren, The seat belt paradox: Effect off accepted roles on information seeking,, 38 (1986), 1-6 pp. 513-513 J. Armstrong Journal of personality and social psychology: Osberg, Timothy M. and J. Sidney Shrauger, Self-prediction: Exploring the parameters of accuracy, 51 (1986), 1044-1057 pp. 514-514 J. ArmstrongVolume 4, issue 2, 1988 Comparing judgmental to extrapolative forecasts: It's time to ask why and when pp. 171-173 Lawrence D. Brown A flexible logistic growth model with applications in telecommunications pp. 177-192 Ronald Bewley and Denzil Fiebig Nested Rotterdam model: Applications to marketing research with special reference to telecommunications demand pp. 193-206 Jack C. Lee Multiple outputs, adjustment costs and the structure of production for Bell Canada pp. 207-219 Jeffrey Bernstein Forecasting political risks for international operations pp. 221-241 Jose de la Torre and David H. Neckar Modeling the formation of expectations: The history of energy demand forecasts pp. 243-259 John D. Sterman Forecasting accuracy and the choice of first difference or percentage change regression models pp. 261-268 Charles J. Lacivita and Terry G. Seaks Forecasting the female labour force in Britain pp. 269-285 Heather Joshi and Elizabeth Overton The business forecasting revolution: F. Gerald Adams, (Oxford University Press, New York, 1986) pp. 265, $18.95, [UK pound]9.68 pp. 287-289 John P. Cullity Centre for economic forecasting, economic and financial review: London Business School, volume 2, 1986 (Gower Aldershot, UK.) pp. 116. [UK pound]9.60. $17.50 pp. 290-291 Kenneth Holden Business cycle surveys in the assessment of economic activity: Karl Heinrich Oppenlander and Gunter Poser, eds. (Gower Aldershot, UK, 1986) pp. 674, [UK pound]35. $50.00 pp. 291-292 S. G. B. Henry Prediction and criminology: David P. Farrington and Roger Tarling, eds. (State University of New York Press, 1985) pp. 218, $49.50 pp. 292-294 Arnold Barnett Breakthroughs! How the vision and drive of innovators in sixteen companies created commercial breakthroughs that swept the world: R. Ranganath Nayak and John M. Ketteringham (Rawson Associates, New York. 1986) pp. 371, $16.45 pp. 294-295 Steven P. Schnaars Analyzing population trends: Differential fertility in a pluralistic society: Lincoln H. Day (St. Martin's Press, New York, 1984) pp. 253, $27.50, [UK pound]19.95 pp. 295-296 Paul R. Voss Model reliability: David A. Belsley and Edwin Kuh, eds. (Massachusetts Institute of Technology Press, Cambridge, MA 1986) pp. 244, $30.00, [UK pound]29.95 pp. 297-298 Robert Fildes Handbook of econometrics: Z. Griliches and M.D. Intrilligator, eds. vol. 2 (North Holland, Amsterdam, 1984) pp. 686 + xxvi. [UK pound]67.19, XXX65.00 pp. 298-300 Phoebus J. Dhrymes Cash flow forecasting: G.R. Kaye and K.N. Bhaskar, Report No. 211, Planning with personal computers 1 (The Economist Publications, 1985) pp. 98, [UK pound]55 pp. 300-300 Chris Beaumont Predicting corporate collapse: A. Bathory (Financial Times Business Information, 1984) pp. 159, [UK pound]65, $110 pp. 300-301 R. Flavell Exchange rate theory and practice: John F. Bilson and Richard C. Marston, eds. (The University of Chicago Press, Chicago and London, 1984) pp. 528, [UK pound]53.25, $66.75 pp. 302-302 R. D. Hewins R&D, patents and productivity: Zvi Griliches, ed. (National Bureau of Economic Research, University of Chicago Press, 1984) pp. 528, [UK pound]47.25, $53.00 pp. 303-303 Kirsty Hughes Software reviews pp. 305-308 Nicholas NobleVolume 4, issue 1, 1988 Editorial: Forecasting disasters pp. 3-4 Willem A. Wagenaar Limits of predictability in forecasting in the behavioral sciences pp. 5-14 Robert H. Doktor and Susan M. Chandler Exploiting linear partial information for optimal use of forecasts: With an application to U.S. economic policy pp. 15-32 Eduard Kofler and Peter Zweifel Evaluation of commercial economic forecasts for use in local government budgeting pp. 33-43 Stuart Bretschneider and Larry Schroeder A comparison of results from state space forecasting with forecasts from the Makridakis Competition pp. 45-55 Anne B. Koehler and Emily S. Murphree Forecasting the Dutch heavy truck market: A multivariate approach pp. 57-79 R. M. J. Heuts and J. H. J. M. Bronckers A comparison of the forecasting performance of WEFA and ARIMA time series methods pp. 81-101 Phoebus J. Dhrymes and Stavros Peristiani Forecasting annual geophysical time series pp. 103-115 Donald J. Noakes, Keith W. Hipel, A. Ian McLeod, Carlos Jimenez and Sidney Yakowitz A note on using the integrated form of ARIMA forecasts pp. 117-124 Ed McKenzie Forecasting housing starts pp. 125-134 Anil K. Puri and Johannes Van Lierop Confidence intervals for population projections based on Monte Carlo methods pp. 135-142 Peter Pflaumer Software reviews pp. 143-159 Steven C. Hillmer International journal of public administration: Lance Eliot Brouthers, parties, ideology and elections: The politics of federal revenues and expenditures forecasting, 8 (1986) 289-314 pp. 161-162 J. Armstrong and Lance Eliot Brouthers Public opinion quarterly: William Buchanan, election predictions: An empirical assessment, 50 (1986) 222-227 pp. 162-164 J. Armstrong and William Buchanan Harvard Business Review: David M. Georgoff and Robert G. Murdick, manager's guide to forecasting, 64 (Jan-Feb.) (1986) 110-120 pp. 164-165 J. Armstrong and David M. Georgoff Public opinion quarterly: James B. Lemert, picking the winners: Politician vs. voter predictions of two controversial ballot measures, 50 (1986) 208-221 pp. 165-166 J. Armstrong and James B. Lemert Public opinion quarterly: Steven J. Rosenstone, John Mark Hansen, and Donald R. Kinder, measuring change in personal economic well-being, 50 (1986) 176-192 pp. 166-167 J. Armstrong and Steven J. Rosenstone Public opinion quarterly: Jacob Shamir, preelection polls in Israel: Structural constraints on accuracy, 50 (1986) 62-75 pp. 167-167 J. 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