Researchers have hypothesized that nasal morphology, both in archaic Homo and in recent humans, is influenced by body mass and associated oxygen consumption demands required for tissue maintenance. Similarly, recent studies of the adult human nasal region have documented key differences in nasal form between males and females that are potentially linked to sexual dimorphism in body size, composition, and energetics. To better understand this potential developmental and functional dynamic, we first assessed sexual dimorphism in the nasal cavity in recent humans to determine when during ontogeny male-female differences in nasal cavity size appear. Next, we assessed whether there are significant differences in nasal/body size scaling relations...
Background\ud Although craniofacial sex differences have been extensively studied in humans, relativ...
This thesis examines variation in the modern human facial skeleton from an ontogenetic perspective, ...
Zaidi A.A., Mattern B.C., Claes P., Hughes C., ''Human nose shape variation can be explained, in par...
Researchers have hypothesized that nasal morphology, both in archaic Homo and in recent humans, is i...
Researchers have hypothesized that nasal morphology, both in archaic Homo and in recent humans, is i...
Objectives Potential integration between the nasal region and noncranial components of the respirato...
Objectives Potential integration between the nasal region and noncranial components of the respirato...
Objective: The aim of this study was to describe normal nasal growth in a large sample of boys and g...
The objective of this study was to measure: (1) normal sex-related dimensions of external nose (line...
[Objectives]: Several studies have analyzed the sexual dimorphism of the skeletal cranial airways. T...
The quantitative assessment of the dimensions of facial soft-tissue structures, their relative propo...
Adolescent growth changes in the nose were studied for 140 female and 140 male subjects between the ...
BACKGROUND: To describe normal soft tissue growth and development of the human face through volume...
Adolescent growth changes in the nose were studied for 140 female and 140 male subjects between the ...
Background\ud Although craniofacial sex differences have been extensively studied in humans, relativ...
Background\ud Although craniofacial sex differences have been extensively studied in humans, relativ...
This thesis examines variation in the modern human facial skeleton from an ontogenetic perspective, ...
Zaidi A.A., Mattern B.C., Claes P., Hughes C., ''Human nose shape variation can be explained, in par...
Researchers have hypothesized that nasal morphology, both in archaic Homo and in recent humans, is i...
Researchers have hypothesized that nasal morphology, both in archaic Homo and in recent humans, is i...
Objectives Potential integration between the nasal region and noncranial components of the respirato...
Objectives Potential integration between the nasal region and noncranial components of the respirato...
Objective: The aim of this study was to describe normal nasal growth in a large sample of boys and g...
The objective of this study was to measure: (1) normal sex-related dimensions of external nose (line...
[Objectives]: Several studies have analyzed the sexual dimorphism of the skeletal cranial airways. T...
The quantitative assessment of the dimensions of facial soft-tissue structures, their relative propo...
Adolescent growth changes in the nose were studied for 140 female and 140 male subjects between the ...
BACKGROUND: To describe normal soft tissue growth and development of the human face through volume...
Adolescent growth changes in the nose were studied for 140 female and 140 male subjects between the ...
Background\ud Although craniofacial sex differences have been extensively studied in humans, relativ...
Background\ud Although craniofacial sex differences have been extensively studied in humans, relativ...
This thesis examines variation in the modern human facial skeleton from an ontogenetic perspective, ...
Zaidi A.A., Mattern B.C., Claes P., Hughes C., ''Human nose shape variation can be explained, in par...