AI Article Synopsis

  • - The talus bone is crucial for understanding how ancient platyrrhines moved, as it helps transmit body weight from the leg to the foot, providing insights into their postural adaptations.
  • - The study compared the talar strength and shape of modern primates classified by locomotion type, using advanced methods like finite-element analysis and geometric morphometrics.
  • - Machine-learning algorithms successfully identified most Miocene platyrrhine fossils as arboreal quadrupeds based on their talar characteristics, indicating that this combined methodology can enhance our understanding of locomotion in both modern and fossil species.

Article Abstract

The talus is one of the most commonly preserved post-cranial elements in the platyrrhine fossil record. Talar morphology can provide information about postural adaptations because it is the anatomical structure responsible for transmitting body mass forces from the leg to the foot. The aim of this study is to test whether the locomotor behaviour of fossil Miocene platyrrhines could be inferred from their talus morphology. The extant sample was classified into three different locomotor categories and then talar strength was compared using finite-element analysis. Geometric morphometrics were used to quantify talar shape and to assess its association with biomechanical strength. Finally, several machine-learning (ML) algorithms were trained using both the biomechanical and morphometric data from the extant taxa to infer the possible locomotor behaviour of the Miocene fossil sample. The obtained results show that the different locomotor categories are distinguishable using either biomechanical or morphometric data. The ML algorithms categorized most of the fossil sample as arboreal quadrupeds. This study has shown that a combined approach can contribute to the understanding of platyrrhine talar morphology and its relationship with locomotion. This approach is likely to be beneficial for determining the locomotor habits in other fossil taxa.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6170775PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1098/rsif.2018.0520DOI Listing

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