人类颈椎的几何形态计量学:性别和人群差异。

IF 1.6 2区 社会学 Q1 ANTHROPOLOGY Journal of Anthropological Sciences Pub Date : 2021-12-17 DOI:10.4436/JASS.99015
Carlos A Palancar, Daniel García-Martínez, David Cáceres-Monllor, Bernardo Perea-Pérez, Maria Teresa Ferreira, Markus Bastir
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引用次数: 0

摘要

本研究旨在首次对全系列颈椎骨的三维尺寸和形状进行几何形态计量分析,深入研究与性别和人口背景相关的变异性。为此,我们分析了欧洲人、非洲人和格陵兰因纽特人的男性和女性颈椎骨。我们对三个不同现代人种群(欧洲人、非洲人和因纽特人)的男性和女性共 219 节颈椎骨进行了三维扫描。在每个三维脊椎模型中至少定位了 72 个地标和曲线半地标。按照三维几何形态计量学的标准对地标配置进行了分析,以检验与性别或种群变异有关的大小和形状差异。结果显示,男性颈椎一直比女性大,而在任何人群中都没有观察到男性和女性在形状上的规律性差异。因此,从三维形状的骨骼层面来看,颈椎前凸的性别差异并不成立。另一方面,没有证据表明特定种群在体型上存在差异,而在形状上确实存在很大差异,这可能也与躯干整体形状的生态地理因素有关。与欧洲人和非洲人相比,适应寒冷的因纽特人的颈椎一直较短。颈椎的形态可能与胸椎和腰椎不同,这可能与颈椎与颅骨的结合更紧密、头部的活动性和软组织的依赖性有关。我们的研究结果表明,根据脊椎骨骼形态来解释颈椎的形态功能需要谨慎。
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Geometric Morphometrics of the human cervical vertebrae: sexual and population variations.

This study aims to carry out the first geometric morphometric analysis of the 3D size and shape of the full series of cervical vertebrae delving into variability related to sex and population background. For this reason, we analyzed the cervical vertebrae of both males and females belonging to Europeans, Africans, and Greenland Inuit. We 3D-scanned a total of 219 cervical vertebrae of males and females of three different modern human populations (European, African, and Inuit). A minimum of 72 landmarks and curve semilandmarks were positioned in each of the 3D vertebral models. Landmark configurations were analyzed following the standards of 3D Geometric Morphometrics to test for size and shape differences related to sex or population variation. Results show that male cervical vertebrae are consistently larger than in females while no regular shape differences are observed between males and females in any of the populations. Sex differences in cervical lordosis are thus not supported at the skeletal level of the 3D shape. On the other hand, there is no evidence for population-specific differences in size while shape does vary considerably, possibly also in relation to eco-geographic factors of overall trunk shape. Cervical vertebrae in cold-adapted Inuit were consistently shorter than in Europeans and Africans. The cervical spine may show a different pattern than the thoracic and lumbar spine, which might be related to stronger integration with the cranium, head mobility, and soft-tissue dependence. Our findings suggest that morpho-functional interpretations of the cervical spine based on vertebral skeletal morphology requires caution.

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来源期刊
Journal of Anthropological Sciences
Journal of Anthropological Sciences Social Sciences-Anthropology
CiteScore
2.20
自引率
5.60%
发文量
7
期刊介绍: The Journal of Anthropological Sciences (JASs) publishes reviews, original papers and notes concerning human paleontology, prehistory, biology and genetics of extinct and extant populations. Particular attention is paid to the significance of Anthropology as an interdisciplinary field of research. Only papers in English can be considered for publication. All contributions are revised by the editorial board together with the panel of referees.
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