A three‐dimensional musculoskeletal model of the pelvis and lower limb ofAustralopithecus afarensis

Author:

O'Neill Matthew C.1ORCID,Nagano Akinori2,Umberger Brian R.3ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Anatomy Midwestern University Glendale Arizona USA

2. Faculty of Sport and Health Science Ritsumeikan University Kusatsu Shiga Japan

3. School of Kinesiology University of Michigan Ann Arbor Michigan USA

Abstract

AbstractObjectivesMusculoskeletal modeling is a powerful approach for studying the biomechanics and energetics of locomotion.Australopithecus (A.) afarensisis among the best represented fossil hominins and provides critical information about the evolution of musculoskeletal design and locomotion in the hominin lineage. Here, we develop and evaluate a three‐dimensional (3‐D) musculoskeletal model of the pelvis and lower limb ofA. afarensisfor predicting muscle‐tendon moment arms and moment‐generating capacities across lower limb joint positions encompassing a range of locomotor behaviors.Materials and MethodsA 3‐D musculoskeletal model of an adultA. afarensispelvis and lower limb was developed based primarily on the A.L. 288‐1 partial skeleton. The model includes geometric representations of bones, joints and 35 muscle‐tendon units represented using 43 Hill‐type muscle models. Two muscle parameter datasets were created from human and chimpanzee sources. 3‐D muscle‐tendon moment arms and isometric joint moments were predicted over a wide range of joint positions.ResultsPredicted muscle‐tendon moment arms generally agreed with skeletal metrics, and corresponded with human and chimpanzee models. Human and chimpanzee‐based muscle parameterizations were similar, with some differences in maximum isometric force‐producing capabilities. The model is amenable to size scaling from A.L. 288‐1 to the larger KSD‐VP‐1/1, which subsumes a wide range of size variation inA. afarensis.DiscussionThis model represents an important tool for studying the integrated function of the neuromusculoskeletal systems inA. afarensis. It is similar to current human and chimpanzee models in musculoskeletal detail, and will permit direct, comparative 3‐D simulation studies.

Funder

National Science Foundation

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Paleontology,Archeology,Genetics,Anthropology,Anatomy,Epidemiology

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