Schneider Electric, the global specialist in energy management, has announced the release of Electric Vijeo Designer 6.1, is the integrated development environment that enables you to use the PC to create a Human Machine Interface (HMI) user application. The cross-platform Vijeo Designer configuration software can be used to create operator dialogue applications for controlling automation systems.
Vijeo Designer and a suitable terminal can be combined to provide a solution for each and every control station requirement, at the cost of a simple software reconfiguration. Capable of supporting video image streaming, the Magelis Vijeo Designer offer provides access to new types of application. Users can view their process instantly or following a delay, on the same screen as the HMI dialogue. Vijeo Designer uses Magelis Ethernet TCP/IP connectivity and is therefore able to support WEB Gate remote access, the sharing of application data between terminals, the transfer of recipes and logs for variables and much more-all with total security. Vijeo Designer is the HMI component of SoMachine. Vijeo Designer will run on any PC with Windows XP Professional or Windows 7.
Download keygen for Schneider Electric Vijeo Designer 6.1.4 SP4 Schneider Electric, the global specialist in energy management, has announced the release of Electric Vijeo Designer 6.1, is the integrated development environment that enables you to use the PC to create a Human Machine Interface (HMI) user application.
It supports WYSIWYG simulation of the expanded application (without Magelis GT/GK/GTW/GTO terminal or target Magelis iPC), the simulation of PLC variables (I/O, internal bits and words) and ensures that the application runs in total security on the Magelis GT/GK/GTW/GTO base terminal or Magelis industrial PCs.
People may be able to determine your social status just by looking at your “neutral” face without any expression, according to a new study by psychology researchers at the University of Toronto’s Faculty of Arts and Science. These impressions might also be used in biased ways, as many people tend to judge a “rich” face as more likely than a poor one to be hired for a job. “It indicates that something as subtle as the signals in your face about your social class can actually then perpetuate it,” said researcher Thora Bjornsdottir, a Ph.D. “Those first impressions can become a sort of self-fulfilling prophesy. It’s going to influence your interactions, and the opportunities you have.” Surprisingly, the researchers found the ability to read a person’s social class only applies to their neutral face and not when people are smiling or expressing emotions. The researchers conclude that emotions mask lifelong habits of expression that become etched on a person’s face even by their late teens or early adulthood, such as frequent happiness, which is stereotypically associated with being wealthy and satisfied. “Over time, your face comes to permanently reflect and reveal your experiences,” said Associate Professor Dr.
Nicholas Rule. “Even when we think we’re not expressing something, relics of those emotions are still there.” Using an annual median family income of about $75,000 as a benchmark, student volunteers were placed in one of two groups in which the total family income was under $60,000 or above $100,000. Then the students posed for photographs with neutral faces devoid of expression.
Next, a separate group of participants looked at the photos and, using nothing but their gut instinct, identified which ones were “rich or poor” just by looking at the faces. They were able to determine which student belonged to the rich or poor group with about 53 percent accuracy, a level that exceeds random chance. “People are not really aware of what cues they are using when they make these judgments,” Bjornsdottir said. “If you ask them why, they don’t know. They are not aware of how they are doing this.” Race and gender did not affect the results. “What we’re seeing is students who are just 18-22 years old have already accumulated enough life experience that it has visibly changed and shaped their face to the point you can tell what their socioeconomic standing or social class is,” said Rule.
“There are neurons in the brain that specialize in facial recognition. The face is the first thing you notice when you look at somebody,” he said. “We see faces in clouds, we see faces in toast. We are sort of hardwired to look for face-like stimuli. And this is something people pick up very quickly. And they are consistent, which is what makes it statistically significant.” The study of social classes is a growing field in the realm of psychology and behavior, Rule said.
And with 43 muscles concentrated in a relatively small area, facial cues are one of the most intriguing areas to study. “People talk about the cycle of poverty, and this is potentially one contributor to that,” Rule said. He said the next step might be to study older age groups to see if the patterns of facial cues become even more prominent over time.
The findings are published in the Journal of Personality and Social Psychology.