6533b873fe1ef96bd12d5798

RESEARCH PRODUCT

Assessing thoraco-pelvic covariation in Homo sapiens and Pan troglodytes: A 3D geometric morphometric approach

Markus BastirFederico Mata-escolanoNicole Torres-tamayoNicole Torres-tamayoMotoharu OishiStefan SchlagerSandra MartelliJuan A. Sanchis-gimenoDaniel García-martínezNaomichi OgiharaShahed NallaShahed Nalla

subject

AdultMalePan troglodytesIntegrationTroglodytesContext (language use)PLSAnthropology PhysicalPelvisYoung AdultImaging Three-DimensionalmedicineAnimalsHumansChimpanzeesMorphometricsSex CharacteristicsbiologyHominoideaTorsoSmall sampleTorsoThoraxbiology.organism_classificationbody regionsSexual dimorphismAnatomy Comparativemedicine.anatomical_structureEvolutionary biologyHomo sapiensAnthropologyFemaleAllometryAnatomyTomography X-Ray Computed

description

[Objectives]: Understanding thoraco-pelvic integration in Homo sapiens and their closest living relatives (genus Pan) is of great importance within the context of human body shape evolution. However, studies assessing thoraco-pelvic covariation across Hominoidea species are scarce, although recent research would suggest shared covariation patterns in humans and chimpanzees but also species-specific features, with sexual dimorphism and allometry influencing thoraco-pelvic covariation in these taxa differently.

10.1002/ajpa.24103http://hdl.handle.net/10261/236787