Theoretical adaptive landscapes and mathematical representations of key constraints of evolutionary and primate biology are used to propose a new hypothesis for the origin of hominin bipedalism. These constraints suggest that the selective pressure that produced this novel form of locomotion was the need for effective suspensory and terrestrial movement. This testable hypothesis, termed the Decoupling Hypothesis, posits that bipedalism is an adaptation that enables the shoulder to maintain a high degree of mobility, a feature important to suspensory behaviors, in the face of significant demands for a high degree of stability, a feature important for highly effective terrestrial quadrupedism
Analysis of qualitative indicators of stability of the body during different types of locomotion in ...
Bipedal locomotion is a defining characteristic of humans and birds and has a profound effect on how...
Paleoanthropologists mark the divergence between apes and hominids with the adaptation ofbipedalism ...
Theoretical adaptive landscapes and mathematical representations of key constraints of evolutionary ...
Theoretical adaptive landscapes and mathematical representations of key constraints of evolutionary ...
Bipedal locomotion is the first feature to arise during human evolution and therefore used to define...
A host of ecological, anatomical, and physiological selective pressures are hypothesized to have pla...
SummaryWhy did our earliest hominin ancestors begin to walk bipedally as their main form of terrestr...
Why did our earliest hominin ancestors begin to walk bipedally as their main form of terrestrial tra...
Until recently, the last common ancestor of African apes and humans was presumed to resemble living ...
In this article, I advance a novel hypothesis on the evolution of hominin bipedalism. I begin by arg...
When considering the array of terrestrial locomotor behaviors, bipedalism is a particularly rare way...
Motion analysis, as applied to evolutionary biomechanics, has experienced its own evolution over the...
Abstract of paper presented at the 5th SASQUA Conference, July 1979Bipedalism is the hallmark of the...
Several attributes are only found in primates, some of these are even more unique and noticeable in ...
Analysis of qualitative indicators of stability of the body during different types of locomotion in ...
Bipedal locomotion is a defining characteristic of humans and birds and has a profound effect on how...
Paleoanthropologists mark the divergence between apes and hominids with the adaptation ofbipedalism ...
Theoretical adaptive landscapes and mathematical representations of key constraints of evolutionary ...
Theoretical adaptive landscapes and mathematical representations of key constraints of evolutionary ...
Bipedal locomotion is the first feature to arise during human evolution and therefore used to define...
A host of ecological, anatomical, and physiological selective pressures are hypothesized to have pla...
SummaryWhy did our earliest hominin ancestors begin to walk bipedally as their main form of terrestr...
Why did our earliest hominin ancestors begin to walk bipedally as their main form of terrestrial tra...
Until recently, the last common ancestor of African apes and humans was presumed to resemble living ...
In this article, I advance a novel hypothesis on the evolution of hominin bipedalism. I begin by arg...
When considering the array of terrestrial locomotor behaviors, bipedalism is a particularly rare way...
Motion analysis, as applied to evolutionary biomechanics, has experienced its own evolution over the...
Abstract of paper presented at the 5th SASQUA Conference, July 1979Bipedalism is the hallmark of the...
Several attributes are only found in primates, some of these are even more unique and noticeable in ...
Analysis of qualitative indicators of stability of the body during different types of locomotion in ...
Bipedal locomotion is a defining characteristic of humans and birds and has a profound effect on how...
Paleoanthropologists mark the divergence between apes and hominids with the adaptation ofbipedalism ...