首页> 外文期刊>The anatomical record: advances in integrative anatomy and evolutionary biology >Dynamic pressure patterns in the hands of olive baboons (Papio anubis) during terrestrial locomotion: implications for cercopithecoid primate hand morphology.
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Dynamic pressure patterns in the hands of olive baboons (Papio anubis) during terrestrial locomotion: implications for cercopithecoid primate hand morphology.

机译:陆上运动过程中橄榄狒狒(Papio anubis)手中的动态压力模式:对长尾蛇类灵长类动物手形态的影响。

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摘要

Habitually terrestrial monkeys adopt digitigrade hand postures at slow speeds to increase effective forelimb length and reduce distal limb joint moments. As these primates move faster, however, their hands transition to a more palmigrade posture, which is likely associated with the inability of wrist and hand joints to resist higher ground reaction forces (GRF) associated with faster speeds. Transitioning to a palmigrade posture may serve to distribute GRFs over a larger surface area (i.e., increased palmar contact), ultimately reducing stresses in fragile hand bones. To test this hypothesis, dynamic palmar pressure data were collected on two adult baboons (Papio anubis) walking, running, and galloping across a runway integrated with a dynamic pressure mat (20 steps each; speed range: 0.46-4.0 m/s). Peak GRF, contact area, peak pressure, and pressure-time integral were quantified in two regions of the hand: fingers and palms (including metacarpal heads). At slower speeds with lower GRFs, the baboons use digitigrade postures resulting in small palmar contact area (largely across the metacarpal heads). At faster speeds with higher GRFs, they used less digitigrade hand postures resulting in increased palmar contact area. Finger contact area did not change across speeds. Despite higher GRFs at faster speeds, metacarpal pressure was moderated across speeds due to increased palmar contact area as animals transitioned from digitigrady to palmigrady. In contrast, the pressure in the fingers increased with faster speeds. Results indicate that the transition from digitigrady to palmigrady distributes increased forces over a larger palmar surface area. Such dynamic changes in palmar pressure likely moderate strain in the gracile bones of the hand, a structure that is integral not only for locomotion, but also feeding and social behaviors in primates.
机译:惯常的陆生猴子以低速采取数位姿势,以增加有效的前肢长度并减少远端肢体关节力矩。但是,随着这些灵长类动物运动得更快,它们的手会转变为更加掌心的姿势,这可能与腕部和手部关节无法抵抗与更快速度相关的更高的地面反作用力(GRF)有关。过渡到手掌姿势可能有助于将GRF分布在更大的表面积上(即增加的手掌接触),最终减轻了脆弱手骨的压力。为了验证这一假设,收集了两只成年狒狒(Papio anubis)行走,奔跑和疾驰在一条与动态压力垫集成在一起的跑道上的动态手掌压力数据(每个20步;速度范围:0.46-4.0 m / s)。在手的两个区域(手指和手掌(包括掌骨))中,对GRF峰值,接触面积,峰值压力和压力-时间积分进行了量化。在GRF较低的情况下,速度较慢,狒狒采用数指姿势,导致手掌接触面积小(大部分跨掌骨)。在较高GRF的情况下,以较快的速度使用较少的数位手姿势,导致手掌接触面积增加。手指接触面积并未随速度变化。尽管以更快的速度获得了更高的GRF,但由于动物从指骨过渡到手掌转变而引起的手掌接触面积增加,因此掌指压力在各个速度上均得到了缓和。相反,手指中的压力以更快的速度增加。结果表明,从数字逐渐过渡到手掌逐渐向更大的手掌表面积分布。手掌压力的这种动态变化可能会减轻手的脆弱骨骼的紧张程度,这种结构不仅对于运动,对于灵长类动物的进食和社交行为都是不可或缺的。

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