Allometry for the Twenty-First Century

被引:14
作者
Bookstein F.L. [1 ,2 ]
机构
[1] Faculty of Life Sciences, University of Vienna, Vienna
[2] Department of Statistics, University of Washington, Seattle
基金
美国国家科学基金会;
关键词
Allometry of strain; Bending energy; Biomechanics of elasticity; Biometrics of strain; Finite element analysis; Form and biomechanical function; Geometric morphometrics; Relative warps analysis; Strain energy; Strain energy density;
D O I
10.1007/s13752-012-0064-0
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
The current literature that attempts to bridge between geometric morphometrics (GMM) and finite element analyses (FEA) of CT-derived data from bones of living animals and fossils appears to lack a sound biotheoretical foundation. To supply the missing rigor, the present article demonstrates a new rhetoric of quantitative inference across the GMM–FEA bridge—a rhetoric bridging form to function when both have been quantified so stringently. The suggested approach is founded on diverse standard textbook examples of the relation between forms and the way strains in them are produced by stresses imposed upon them. One potentially cogent approach to the explanatory purposes driving studies of this class arises from a close scrutiny of the way in which computations in both domains, shape and strain, can be couched as minimizations of a scalar quantity. For GMM, this is ordinary Procrustes shape distance; in FEA, it is the potential energy that is stored in the deformed configuration of the solid form. A hybrid statistical method is introduced requiring that all forms be subjected to the same detailed loading designs (the same “probes”) in a manner careful to accommodate the variations of those same forms before they were stressed. The proper role of GMM is argued to be the construction of regressions for strain energy density on the largest-scale relative warps in order that biological explanations may proceed in terms of the residuals from those regressions: the local residual features of strain energy density. The method, evidently a hierarchical one, might be intuitively apprehended as a geometrical approach to a formal allometric analysis of strain. The essay closes with an exhortation. © 2012, Konrad Lorenz Institute for Evolution and Cognition Research.
引用
收藏
页码:10 / 25
页数:15
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