Hartwig Walter Carl
Laboratory for Human Evolutionary Studies, Department of Anthropology, University of California, Berkeley, California 94720.
J Morphol. 1991 Dec;210(3):289-298. doi: 10.1002/jmor.1052100307.
Quantifying shape is a broad problem in the morphological sciences. Most techniques for numerically describing shape abstract the shape into the most logical ideal Euclidean dimension. The fractional, or fractal, dimension is a simple computation that expresses shape in real, rather than ideal, space. The structured walk technique developed for the fractal analysis of rugged boundaries is applied here to the contour of the human sagittal suture in order to discriminate the separate morphological patterns of interfingering and interlocking. These attributes contribute differentially to the suture's "complexity," a concept often used in biomechanical hypotheses. Previous techniques for estimating sutural complexity do not isolate small-scale from large-scale morphological patterns. Results indicate that despite the visual appearance of great variation, human sagittal sutures are remarkably consistent in the degree of complexity expressed separately by large-scale interfingering lateral excursions and small-scale interlocking ruggedness. There is no significant correlation between the absolute or bregma-lambda chord length of the human sagittal suture and its degree of complexity as determined by the structured walk technique.
量化形状是形态科学中的一个广泛问题。大多数用于数字描述形状的技术将形状抽象为最符合逻辑的理想欧几里得维度。分数维或分形维是一种简单的计算方法,它在真实而非理想空间中表达形状。为崎岖边界的分形分析而开发的结构化步长技术在此应用于人类矢状缝的轮廓,以区分相互交错和连锁的不同形态模式。这些属性对缝合线的“复杂性”有不同的贡献,“复杂性”是生物力学假设中经常使用的一个概念。以前估计缝合线复杂性的技术没有将小尺度形态模式与大尺度形态模式区分开来。结果表明,尽管视觉上看起来差异很大,但人类矢状缝在由大尺度相互交错的侧向偏移和小尺度连锁的崎岖程度分别表示的复杂程度上非常一致。人类矢状缝的绝对或前囟-枕骨弦长与其由结构化步长技术确定的复杂程度之间没有显著相关性。