Morphometry, Geometry, Function, and the Future

Title

Morphometry, Geometry, Function, and the Future

Creator

McNulty K P; Vinyard C J

Publisher

Anatomical Record-Advances in Integrative Anatomy and Evolutionary Biology

Date

2015
2015-01

Description

The proliferation of geometric morphometrics (GM) in biological anthropology and more broadly throughout the biological sciences has resulted in a multitude of studies that adopt landmark-based approaches for addressing a variety of questions in evolutionary morphology. In some cases, particularly in the realm of systematics, the fit between research question and analytical design is quite good. Functional-adaptive studies, however, do not readily conform to the methods available in the GM toolkit. The symposium organized by Terhune and Cooke entitled Assessing function via shape: What is the place of GM in functional morphology? held at the 2013 meetings of the American Association of Physical Anthropologists was designed specifically to explore this relationship between landmark-based methods and analyses of functional morphology, and the articles in this special issue, which stem in large part from this symposium, provide numerous examples of how the two approaches can complement and contrast each other. Here, we underscore some of the major difficulties in interpreting GM results within a functional regime. In combination with other contributions in this issue, we identify emerging areas of research that will help bridge the gap between multivariate morphometry and functional-adaptive analysis. Ultimately, neither geometric nor functional morphometric approaches is sufficient to elaborate the adaptive pathways that explain morphological evolution through natural selection. These perspectives must be further integrated with research from physiology, developmental biology, genomics, and ecology. Anat Rec, 298:328-333, 2015. (c) 2014 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.

Subject

Anatomy & Morphology; evolution; morphology; performance; primates; darwins finches; adaptation; selection; form; evolutionary; fitness; shape; biological anthropology; geometric morphometrics

Identifier

Format

Journal Article or Conference Abstract Publication

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Rights

Article information provided for research and reference use only. All rights are retained by the journal listed under publisher and/or the creator(s).

Pages

328-333

Issue

1

Volume

298

Citation

McNulty K P; Vinyard C J, “Morphometry, Geometry, Function, and the Future,” NEOMED Bibliography Database, accessed April 25, 2024, https://neomed.omeka.net/items/show/9081.