Adelaide Medical School, Biological Anthropology and Comparative Anatomy Research Unit, The University of Adelaide, Adelaide, South Australia, Australia.
Sculpture Department, Herberger Institute for Design and the Arts, Arizona State University, Tempe, Arizona, United States of America.
PLoS One. 2021 Jun 4;16(6):e0245760. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0245760. eCollection 2021.
In modern humans, facial soft tissue thicknesses have been shown to covary with craniometric dimensions. However, to date it has not been confirmed whether these relationships are shared with non-human apes. In this study, we analyze these relationships in chimpanzees (Pan troglodytes) with the aim of producing regression models for approximating facial soft tissue thicknesses in Plio-Pleistocene hominids. Using CT scans of 19 subjects, 637 soft tissue, and 349 craniometric measurements, statistically significant multiple regression models were established for 26 points on the face and head. Examination of regression model validity resulted in minimal differences between observed and predicted soft tissue thickness values. Assessment of interspecies compatibility using a bonobo (Pan paniscus) and modern human subject resulted in minimal differences for the bonobo but large differences for the modern human. These results clearly show that (1) soft tissue thicknesses covary with craniometric dimensions in P. troglodytes, (2) confirms that such covariation is uniformly present in both extant Homo and Pan species, and (3) suggests that chimp-derived regression models have interspecies compatibility with hominids who have similar craniometric dimensions to P. troglodytes. As the craniometric dimensions of early hominids, such as South African australopithecines, are more similar to P. troglodytes than those of H. sapiens, chimpanzee-derived regression models may be used for approximating their craniofacial anatomy. It is hoped that the results of the present study and the reference dataset for facial soft tissue thicknesses of chimpanzees it provides will encourage further research into this topic.
在现代人中,面部软组织厚度与头测量尺寸相关。然而,迄今为止,尚未确认这些关系是否与非人类猿类共享。在这项研究中,我们分析了黑猩猩(Pan troglodytes)中的这些关系,目的是为更新世人类形态学的近似面部软组织厚度生成回归模型。使用 19 个对象的 CT 扫描、637 个软组织和 349 个头测量值,为面部和头部的 26 个点建立了具有统计学意义的多元回归模型。对回归模型有效性的检验导致观察到的和预测的软组织厚度值之间的差异最小。使用倭黑猩猩(Pan paniscus)和现代人类对象评估种间兼容性,结果发现倭黑猩猩的差异最小,而现代人类的差异较大。这些结果清楚地表明:(1)软组织厚度与黑猩猩的头测量尺寸相关;(2)确认了这种相关性在现生的 Homo 和 Pan 物种中普遍存在;(3)表明基于黑猩猩的回归模型与具有与黑猩猩相似头测量尺寸的人类形态学具有种间兼容性。由于南非南方古猿等早期人类的头测量尺寸与黑猩猩更为相似,而不是与现代人相似,因此可以使用黑猩猩回归模型来近似他们的颅面解剖结构。希望本研究的结果以及它提供的黑猩猩面部软组织厚度参考数据集将鼓励进一步研究这个课题。