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Human feeding biomechanics: performance, variation, and functional constraints

The evolution of the modern human (Homo sapiens) cranium is characterized by a reduction in the size of the feeding system, including reductions in the size of the facial skeleton, postcanine teeth, and the muscles involved in biting and chewing. The conventional view hypothesizes that gracilization...

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Autores principales: Ledogar, Justin A., Dechow, Paul C., Wang, Qian, Gharpure, Poorva H., Gordon, Adam D., Baab, Karen L., Smith, Amanda L., Weber, Gerhard W., Grosse, Ian R., Ross, Callum F., Richmond, Brian G., Wright, Barth W., Byron, Craig, Wroe, Stephen, Strait, David S.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: PeerJ Inc. 2016
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4975005/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/27547550
http://dx.doi.org/10.7717/peerj.2242
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author Ledogar, Justin A.
Dechow, Paul C.
Wang, Qian
Gharpure, Poorva H.
Gordon, Adam D.
Baab, Karen L.
Smith, Amanda L.
Weber, Gerhard W.
Grosse, Ian R.
Ross, Callum F.
Richmond, Brian G.
Wright, Barth W.
Byron, Craig
Wroe, Stephen
Strait, David S.
author_facet Ledogar, Justin A.
Dechow, Paul C.
Wang, Qian
Gharpure, Poorva H.
Gordon, Adam D.
Baab, Karen L.
Smith, Amanda L.
Weber, Gerhard W.
Grosse, Ian R.
Ross, Callum F.
Richmond, Brian G.
Wright, Barth W.
Byron, Craig
Wroe, Stephen
Strait, David S.
author_sort Ledogar, Justin A.
collection PubMed
description The evolution of the modern human (Homo sapiens) cranium is characterized by a reduction in the size of the feeding system, including reductions in the size of the facial skeleton, postcanine teeth, and the muscles involved in biting and chewing. The conventional view hypothesizes that gracilization of the human feeding system is related to a shift toward eating foods that were less mechanically challenging to consume and/or foods that were processed using tools before being ingested. This hypothesis predicts that human feeding systems should not be well-configured to produce forceful bites and that the cranium should be structurally weak. An alternate hypothesis, based on the observation that humans have mechanically efficient jaw adductors, states that the modern human face is adapted to generate and withstand high biting forces. We used finite element analysis (FEA) to test two opposing mechanical hypotheses: that compared to our closest living relative, chimpanzees (Pan troglodytes), the modern human craniofacial skeleton is (1) less well configured, or (2) better configured to generate and withstand high magnitude bite forces. We considered intraspecific variation in our examination of human feeding biomechanics by examining a sample of geographically diverse crania that differed notably in shape. We found that our biomechanical models of human crania had broadly similar mechanical behavior despite their shape variation and were, on average, less structurally stiff than the crania of chimpanzees during unilateral biting when loaded with physiologically-scaled muscle loads. Our results also show that modern humans are efficient producers of bite force, consistent with previous analyses. However, highly tensile reaction forces were generated at the working (biting) side jaw joint during unilateral molar bites in which the chewing muscles were recruited with bilateral symmetry. In life, such a configuration would have increased the risk of joint dislocation and constrained the maximum recruitment levels of the masticatory muscles on the balancing (non-biting) side of the head. Our results do not necessarily conflict with the hypothesis that anterior tooth (incisors, canines, premolars) biting could have been selectively important in humans, although the reduced size of the premolars in humans has been shown to increase the risk of tooth crown fracture. We interpret our results to suggest that human craniofacial evolution was probably not driven by selection for high magnitude unilateral biting, and that increased masticatory muscle efficiency in humans is likely to be a secondary byproduct of selection for some function unrelated to forceful biting behaviors. These results are consistent with the hypothesis that a shift to softer foods and/or the innovation of pre-oral food processing techniques relaxed selective pressures maintaining craniofacial features that favor forceful biting and chewing behaviors, leading to the characteristically small and gracile faces of modern humans.
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spelling pubmed-49750052016-08-19 Human feeding biomechanics: performance, variation, and functional constraints Ledogar, Justin A. Dechow, Paul C. Wang, Qian Gharpure, Poorva H. Gordon, Adam D. Baab, Karen L. Smith, Amanda L. Weber, Gerhard W. Grosse, Ian R. Ross, Callum F. Richmond, Brian G. Wright, Barth W. Byron, Craig Wroe, Stephen Strait, David S. PeerJ Anthropology The evolution of the modern human (Homo sapiens) cranium is characterized by a reduction in the size of the feeding system, including reductions in the size of the facial skeleton, postcanine teeth, and the muscles involved in biting and chewing. The conventional view hypothesizes that gracilization of the human feeding system is related to a shift toward eating foods that were less mechanically challenging to consume and/or foods that were processed using tools before being ingested. This hypothesis predicts that human feeding systems should not be well-configured to produce forceful bites and that the cranium should be structurally weak. An alternate hypothesis, based on the observation that humans have mechanically efficient jaw adductors, states that the modern human face is adapted to generate and withstand high biting forces. We used finite element analysis (FEA) to test two opposing mechanical hypotheses: that compared to our closest living relative, chimpanzees (Pan troglodytes), the modern human craniofacial skeleton is (1) less well configured, or (2) better configured to generate and withstand high magnitude bite forces. We considered intraspecific variation in our examination of human feeding biomechanics by examining a sample of geographically diverse crania that differed notably in shape. We found that our biomechanical models of human crania had broadly similar mechanical behavior despite their shape variation and were, on average, less structurally stiff than the crania of chimpanzees during unilateral biting when loaded with physiologically-scaled muscle loads. Our results also show that modern humans are efficient producers of bite force, consistent with previous analyses. However, highly tensile reaction forces were generated at the working (biting) side jaw joint during unilateral molar bites in which the chewing muscles were recruited with bilateral symmetry. In life, such a configuration would have increased the risk of joint dislocation and constrained the maximum recruitment levels of the masticatory muscles on the balancing (non-biting) side of the head. Our results do not necessarily conflict with the hypothesis that anterior tooth (incisors, canines, premolars) biting could have been selectively important in humans, although the reduced size of the premolars in humans has been shown to increase the risk of tooth crown fracture. We interpret our results to suggest that human craniofacial evolution was probably not driven by selection for high magnitude unilateral biting, and that increased masticatory muscle efficiency in humans is likely to be a secondary byproduct of selection for some function unrelated to forceful biting behaviors. These results are consistent with the hypothesis that a shift to softer foods and/or the innovation of pre-oral food processing techniques relaxed selective pressures maintaining craniofacial features that favor forceful biting and chewing behaviors, leading to the characteristically small and gracile faces of modern humans. PeerJ Inc. 2016-07-26 /pmc/articles/PMC4975005/ /pubmed/27547550 http://dx.doi.org/10.7717/peerj.2242 Text en © 2016 Ledogar et al. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, reproduction and adaptation in any medium and for any purpose provided that it is properly attributed. For attribution, the original author(s), title, publication source (PeerJ) and either DOI or URL of the article must be cited.
spellingShingle Anthropology
Ledogar, Justin A.
Dechow, Paul C.
Wang, Qian
Gharpure, Poorva H.
Gordon, Adam D.
Baab, Karen L.
Smith, Amanda L.
Weber, Gerhard W.
Grosse, Ian R.
Ross, Callum F.
Richmond, Brian G.
Wright, Barth W.
Byron, Craig
Wroe, Stephen
Strait, David S.
Human feeding biomechanics: performance, variation, and functional constraints
title Human feeding biomechanics: performance, variation, and functional constraints
title_full Human feeding biomechanics: performance, variation, and functional constraints
title_fullStr Human feeding biomechanics: performance, variation, and functional constraints
title_full_unstemmed Human feeding biomechanics: performance, variation, and functional constraints
title_short Human feeding biomechanics: performance, variation, and functional constraints
title_sort human feeding biomechanics: performance, variation, and functional constraints
topic Anthropology
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4975005/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/27547550
http://dx.doi.org/10.7717/peerj.2242
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