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by improbable22 2728 days ago
Thanks this is interesting. Is part of the problem that people's feet change size with weight?

I have the impression that this is half the battle with finding shoes myself. Probably the bones are the same size left and right, but I think they deform differently as I stand (or walk) in a way that depends on the contours of the shoe... and that sounds like a problem that would be hard to model with laser scanning or whatever.

2 comments

You're right that the feet deform significantly when you stand on them. For that reason you usually measure them load-bearing (i.e. you stand up with even weight distribution on your feet).

I think it's more likely that it's the deformation of the shoe that is uneven than that the shoe affects the deformation of the foot much. An exception would be if it has a built-up sole with support for the arches, preventing the arches from collapsing.

Either way, it's a complex process that is hard to model, just like you say. The way we're getting around it is by collecting various data on what people end up liking and then infer the properties of the shoe, rather than trying to explicitly model it. So the solution is a combination of 3D scanning and machine learning.

Also worth mentioning, by the way: most people actually have slightly different size and shape on their left vs. right foot. For about 50% of the population the length differs by more than half a US size. Being perfectly symmetrical is the rare case.

Your feet can swell half a size just through the course of a day!