<div><p>The shape of the human female pelvis is thought to reflect an evolutionary trade-off between two competing demands: a pelvis wide enough to permit the birth of large-brained infants, and narrow enough for efficient bipedal locomotion. This trade-off, known as the obstetrical dilemma, is invoked to explain the relative difficulty of human childbirth and differences in locomotor performance between men and women. The basis for the obstetrical dilemma is a standard static biomechanical model that predicts wider pelves in females increase the metabolic cost of locomotion by decreasing the effective mechanical advantage of the hip abductor muscles for pelvic stabilization during the single-leg support phase of walking and running, requir...
The term ‘obstetrical dilemma’ was coined by Washburn in 1960 to describe the trade-off between sele...
Habitual bipedal locomotion in hominins required major alterations in pelvic shape, particularly the...
The locomotor economy of females during pregnancy would have been an important selection pressure th...
The shape of the human female pelvis is thought to reflect an evolutionary trade-off between two com...
The shape of the human female pelvis is thought to reflect an evolutionary trade-off between two com...
The shape of the human female pelvis is thought to reflect an evolutionary trade-off between two com...
Compared to most other primates, humans are characterized by a tight fit between the maternal birth ...
Objectives: The “obstetrical dilemma” hypothesis assumes that the modern human female pelvis serves ...
Compared with other primates, childbirth is remarkably difficult in humans because the head of a hum...
Sexual dimorphism in the human pelvis is usually being explained as an adaptation to upright walking...
Compared with other primates, childbirth is remarkably difficult in humans because the head of a hum...
Childbirth is biomechanically challenging for humans, as mothers must deliver a relatively large-hea...
Paleoanthropologists interpret the functional morphology of the female pelvis as a compromise betwee...
This thesis will introduce the specifics of female locomotion, describe the level of morphological s...
The bony pelvis of adult humans exhibits marked sexual dimorphism, which is traditionally interprete...
The term ‘obstetrical dilemma’ was coined by Washburn in 1960 to describe the trade-off between sele...
Habitual bipedal locomotion in hominins required major alterations in pelvic shape, particularly the...
The locomotor economy of females during pregnancy would have been an important selection pressure th...
The shape of the human female pelvis is thought to reflect an evolutionary trade-off between two com...
The shape of the human female pelvis is thought to reflect an evolutionary trade-off between two com...
The shape of the human female pelvis is thought to reflect an evolutionary trade-off between two com...
Compared to most other primates, humans are characterized by a tight fit between the maternal birth ...
Objectives: The “obstetrical dilemma” hypothesis assumes that the modern human female pelvis serves ...
Compared with other primates, childbirth is remarkably difficult in humans because the head of a hum...
Sexual dimorphism in the human pelvis is usually being explained as an adaptation to upright walking...
Compared with other primates, childbirth is remarkably difficult in humans because the head of a hum...
Childbirth is biomechanically challenging for humans, as mothers must deliver a relatively large-hea...
Paleoanthropologists interpret the functional morphology of the female pelvis as a compromise betwee...
This thesis will introduce the specifics of female locomotion, describe the level of morphological s...
The bony pelvis of adult humans exhibits marked sexual dimorphism, which is traditionally interprete...
The term ‘obstetrical dilemma’ was coined by Washburn in 1960 to describe the trade-off between sele...
Habitual bipedal locomotion in hominins required major alterations in pelvic shape, particularly the...
The locomotor economy of females during pregnancy would have been an important selection pressure th...