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Cranial integration in Homo: singular warps analysis of the midsagittal plane in ontogeny and evolution
Authors:Bookstein Fred L  Gunz Philipp  Mitteroecker Philipp  Prossinger Hermann  Schaefer Katrin  Seidler Horst
Affiliation:Institute for Anthropology, University of Vienna, Althanstrasse 14, 1091 Vienna, Austria.
Abstract:This study addresses some enduring issues of ontogenetic and evolutionary integration in the form of the hominid cranium. Our sample consists of 38 crania: 20 modern adult Homo sapiens, 14 sub-adult H. sapiens, and four archaic Homo. All specimens were CT-scanned except for two infant H. sapiens, who were imaged by MR instead. For each specimen 84 landmarks and semi-landmarks were located on the midsagittal plane and converted to Procrustes shape coordinates. Integration was quantified by the method of singular warps, a new geometric-statistical approach to visualizing correlations among regions. The two classic patterns of integration, evolutionary and ontogenetic, were jointly explored by comparing analyses of overlapping subsamples that span ranges of different hypothetical factors. Evolutionary integration is expressed in the subsample of 24 adult Homo, and ontogenetic integration in the subsample of 34 H. sapiens. In this data set, vault, cranial base, and face show striking and localized patterns of covariation over ontogeny, similar but not identical to the patterns seen over evolution. The principal differences between ontogeny and phylogeny pertain to the cranial base. There is also a component of cranial length to height ratio not reducible to either process. Our methodology allows a separation of these independent processes (and their impact on cranial shape) that conventional methods have not found.
Keywords:Cranial integration   Geometric morphometrics   Singular warps   Relative warps   Human ontogeny   Human phylogeny
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