How do zombies move




















Move with that one purpose. Ignore everything else. Imagine being drunk. Since alcohol clouds the thought-process and impairs motor function, drunk people pretty much act like zombies, so study their behavior to mimic later. Also pay attention to what stimuli they fail to react to right away or even notice at all. If I twist my leg a little bit when I walk, will it make walking like a zombie a little bit more realistic?

Yes it will. You should try to drag your ankles too. Look at zombie movies and observe the people playing the zombies. Yes No. Not Helpful 3 Helpful Monid Zaga. It depends on the type of zombie. In some movies, zombies are quite intelligent, and in some they act more like animals. Not Helpful 2 Helpful Not Helpful 15 Helpful As long as you don't actually bite people and these people know who you are, go ahead. Don't get too carried away, though. Not Helpful 7 Helpful It depends on the situation.

Most of the time you can make noise to complete the effect, but sometimes silence can be more intimidating. Not Helpful 5 Helpful Include your email address to get a message when this question is answered. By using this service, some information may be shared with YouTube. To run like a fast zombie instead of walking like the classic, slower zombie, forget the whole brain damage bit. Helpful 7 Not Helpful 0. Submit a Tip All tip submissions are carefully reviewed before being published.

Related wikiHows How to. How to. About This Article. Co-authored by:. The only explanation for the zombies we see in movies is either that they are not actually dead, but only subject to a pathogen that makes them insane and hungry for flesh, or that they are animated by some evil supernatural force.

If you go back to the episode in the CDC, Dr. Benner shows subject 19 and her it was his wife transformation into a zombie.

According to Dr. Benner locomotion activities resurface. That may include circulation. The cells of the body have both aerobic and anaerobic power sources. I have always pictured zombies as super anaerobic. I realize this is an old thread but I ended up here so here's my theory: all biological viruses aside from perhaps the fungal one don't really work, the body needs blood for coordinated movement, and regeneration, although the zombies are usually decayed they would decay at a much faster rate than they do without blood flow.

Aside from supernatural forces another explanation could be that the virus is actually machine based. When someone dies the nanites' sensors detect no electrical impulses from the body and turn themselves on.

They then control the body by hijacking the cns and relay electrical impulses throughout the body to themselves to control the muscles. This could also explains how a bite can turn an already infected person into a walker: when a living person with dormant nanites comes into contact with activated nanites, through saliva, which is wear the nanites designed to spread infection could be stored these nanites start turning on nanites around them and they start shutting down organs, the human immune system tries to fight this hence the fever, but ultimately dies.

Upon death the reanimation process begins. This could also be why saliva from bites is contagious but no one gives a damn if they get walker blood in their mouth. Zombies are a fungal colony that works by taking over the the structure of the body to seek out blood plasma which is what the zombie fungal bacteria feeds on. Zombies or Zombie Fungal Colonies seek out living creatures to consume their flesh to get at the plasma from the blood.

Because zombies have overtaken a dead body, the digestive system isn't working, so consumed flesh isn't digested, but instead, is either excreted out below through a compromised and rotting digestive tract, or vomited up to make room for more flesh.

The act of eating flesh allows the colony to squeeze out the plasma from the bloody flesh before disposing of it to make room for more. The zombie bacteria isn't strong enough to kill people, but it does infect people and weaken their immune system so that they are more susceptible to disease or just weak to make them easier prey for the zombies.

Once live flesh with the bacterial infection is consumed, those bacteria join the colony and give it strength, thus creating longer living zombies the longer they consume flesh. Sign up to join this community. The best answers are voted up and rise to the top. Stack Overflow for Teams — Collaborate and share knowledge with a private group. Jellyfish also have a very rudimentary digestive system, where simple nutrients merely diffuse into the rest of the body.

When your zombie has no more energy, he'll start to crawl then just lay on the ground and go into hibernation mode. The idea would be to have your zombie bury himself in plants and dirt in order to pump the nutrients out of it. Maybe your zombies have a symbiotic parasite that pumps and processes nutrients for your zombie keeping it "moving" while the parasite uses the zombie to spread to other humans.

I told you about the cordyceps a fungus which invests an ant's brain and controls it towards leafs where the ant is to hang to and die until a branch pierces out of the ant's skull and releases spores. This fungus has a secondary metabolism which creates antibiotics for the ant to keep it from multiple infections while it hosts the cordyceps.

Here are a few videos of the cordyceps' effects. If instead of antibiotics the cordyceps were to produce glucose then you have a way to power your zombie pretty much indefinitely. The bigger problem comes from the state of decay in which the zombies are and would result in them falling apart within a few weeks of infection depending on the weather.

It would also mean that zombies would not survive inside buildings and cities outside of green spaces. Your zombies will likely not look human anymore. Not even in the shape of a human because of the fungi growing off their bodies. How the cordyceps went from the brain of a very specific species of ants to any human brain will have to be hand-waved because it is impossible or would take millions of years of evolution.

But this is the closest I can get you. By working on senses and reflexes alone like a Jellyfish and with the help of a symbiotic parasite likely a fungus you could have something close enough to a "real zombie" which would grow roots to feed themselves in the absence of humans to eat. Edit: I jumped the "would that be enough energy part for now". Since you are very vague I do not want to go through all the energy conversion formulas before I even know if this is a fine concept for you. And also I don't have enough time at this very moment.

Will edit later if this satisfies you. I will offer what may seem like the "obvious" answer, in retrospect: Zombies burn their existing fat and are cannibalizing their own body. This includes cannibalizing their own brain through biological processes, not grabbing pieces of it which is mostly fat.

We do the same through exercise and starvation and if we run out of fat, our body starts burning our muscle tissue, which is how we become emaciated. I would guess one reason Zombies want brains is for their fat content; and perhaps Zombie digestive functions have been compromised to the point that it doesn't let them digest anything but fat.

This has some measure of plausibility; fat is already converted into an easy to access energy storage unit, that is why we get fat. So it is easy to break down. An adult human, as food, offers about , calories.

If Zombies need maybe calories a day slow moving, little brain function, little healing or other bodily maintenance , their own body could sustain them for about days. Wasps are known to inject their venom into cockroaches, paralyzing but not killing them. The wasp drags the helpless roach to its nest and lays its eggs inside the bug's abdomen. When the baby wasps hatch out, they eat the cockroach alive from the inside out.

And, of course, there's the Toxoplasma gondii parasite, which can infect humans. In rats, the parasite makes rodents stop fearing the smell of cat urine, which usually proves fatal for the rats. In pregnant women, toxoplasma infection can cause congenital problems such as deafness or mental retardation in the baby. But when it comes to flesh-eating, shuffling monsters, the zombie phenomenon remains firmly rooted in fiction. Original article on LiveScience. Live Science.



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