Urlacher Samuel S, Snodgrass J Josh, Liebert Melissa A, Cepon-Robins Tara J, Gildner Theresa E, Sugiyama Lawrence S
Department of Human Evolutionary Biology, Harvard University, Cambridge, MA, 02138.
Department of Anthropology, University of Oregon, Eugene, OR, 97403.
Am J Phys Anthropol. 2016 Jun;160(2):353-7. doi: 10.1002/ajpa.22953. Epub 2016 Feb 8.
Knemometry, the precise measurement of lower leg (LL) length, suggests that childhood short-term (e.g., weekly) growth is a dynamic, nonlinear process. However, owing to the large size and complexity of the traditional knemometer device, previous study of short-term growth among children has been restricted predominantly to clinical settings in industrialized Western nations. The aim of the present study is to address this limitation and promote broader understandings of global variation in childhood development by: (1) describing a custom-built portable knemometer and assessing its performance in the field; and (2) demonstrating the potential application of such a device by characterizing childhood short-term LL growth among the indigenous Shuar of Amazonian Ecuador.
Mixed-longitudinal LL length data were collected weekly from 336 Shuar children age 5-12 years old using the custom portable knemometer (n = 1,145 total observations). Device performance and Shuar short-term LL growth were explored using linear mixed effects models and descriptive statistics.
The portable knemometer performed well across a range of participant characteristics and possesses a low technical error of measurement of 0.18 mm. Shuar childhood LL growth averages 0.47 mm/week (SD = 0.75 mm/week), but exhibits large between- and within-individual variation.
Knemometry can be reliably performed in the field, providing a means for evaluating childhood short-term growth among genetically and ecologically diverse populations. Preliminary findings suggest that Shuar weekly LL growth is comparable in mean magnitude but likely more variable than reported for healthy Western children. Future work will further explore these patterns. Am J Phys Anthropol 160:353-357, 2016. © 2016 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.
小腿长度测量法,即对小腿(LL)长度进行精确测量,表明儿童期的短期(如每周)生长是一个动态的、非线性过程。然而,由于传统小腿长度测量仪体积大且结构复杂,以往关于儿童短期生长的研究主要局限于西方工业化国家的临床环境。本研究的目的是解决这一局限性,并通过以下方式促进对全球儿童发育差异的更广泛理解:(1)描述一种定制的便携式小腿长度测量仪,并评估其在实地的性能;(2)通过描述厄瓜多尔亚马逊地区原住民舒阿尔人儿童期小腿的短期生长情况,展示这种设备的潜在应用。
使用定制的便携式小腿长度测量仪,每周收集336名5至12岁舒阿尔儿童的混合纵向小腿长度数据(共1145次观察)。使用线性混合效应模型和描述性统计方法探讨设备性能和舒阿尔儿童小腿的短期生长情况。
便携式小腿长度测量仪在一系列参与者特征方面表现良好,测量技术误差低至0.18毫米。舒阿尔儿童期小腿生长平均每周0.47毫米(标准差 = 0.75毫米/周),但个体间和个体内差异较大。
小腿长度测量法可在实地可靠地进行,为评估遗传和生态多样人群中的儿童短期生长提供了一种手段。初步研究结果表明,舒阿尔人每周小腿生长的平均幅度相当,但可能比健康西方儿童的报告更具变异性。未来的工作将进一步探索这些模式。《美国体质人类学杂志》160:353 - 357,2016年。© 2016威利期刊公司。