Center for Functional Anatomy and Evolution, Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Baltimore, Maryland, USA.
Am J Phys Anthropol. 2021 Mar;174(3):418-433. doi: 10.1002/ajpa.24213. Epub 2021 Jan 18.
This study investigates bilateral asymmetry in the humerus of modern human populations with differing activity patterns to assess the relative plasticity of different bone regions in response to environmental influences, particularly the biomechanical demands of handedness.
External breadths, cross-sectional properties, and centroid sizes were used to quantify directional and absolute asymmetry of humeral diaphyseal, distal periarticular, and articular regions in six populations with differing subsistence strategies (total n = 244). Geometric section properties were measured using computed tomography at six locations along the distal humerus, while centroid sizes of the distal articular and periarticular regions, as well as eight segments of the diaphysis, were extracted from external landmark data. Bilateral asymmetries were compared between populations and sexes. Each property was also tested for correlation with bilateral asymmetry at 40% of bone length, which has been shown to correlate with handedness.
Asymmetry is highest in the diaphysis, but significant through all distal bone regions. Asymmetry increases in the region of the deltoid tuberosity, and progressively declines distally through the shaft and distal periarticular region. Articular asymmetry is higher than periarticular asymmetry, approaching levels seen just proximal to the olecranon fossa, and is weakly but significantly correlated with diaphyseal asymmetry. Hunter-gatherers from Indian Knoll have significantly higher levels of asymmetry than other groups and are more sexually dimorphic, particularly in cross-sectional properties of the diaphysis.
Humeral dimensions throughout the diaphysis, including regions currently used in taxonomic assignments of fossil hominins, likely respond to in vivo use, including population and sex-specific behaviors.
本研究调查了具有不同活动模式的现代人类群体中肱骨的双侧不对称性,以评估不同骨骼区域对环境影响的相对可塑性,特别是对手性的生物力学需求的响应。
使用外部宽度、横截面特性和质心大小来量化六个具有不同生存策略的人群(共 244 人)的肱骨骨干、远端关节周围和关节区域的定向和绝对不对称性。使用计算机断层扫描在远端肱骨的六个位置测量几何截面特性,而远端关节和关节周围区域的质心大小以及骨干的八个节段则从外部地标数据中提取。比较了不同人群和性别的双侧不对称性。还测试了每个属性与在骨长的 40%处的双侧不对称性的相关性,已经证明这与手性相关。
不对称性在骨干中最高,但在所有远端骨骼区域都显著。不对称性在三角肌粗隆区域增加,并通过骨干和远端关节周围区域逐渐下降。关节不对称性高于关节周围不对称性,接近鹰嘴窝近端的水平,并且与骨干的不对称性呈弱但显著的相关性。来自印度丘的狩猎采集者的不对称性水平明显高于其他群体,并且性别差异更大,特别是在骨干的横截面特性方面。
骨干的肱骨尺寸,包括当前用于化石人类分类分配的区域,可能对体内使用有反应,包括人群和性别特定的行为。