283 research outputs found
Metabolic acceleration and the evolution of human brain size and life history.
Humans are distinguished from the other living apes in having larger brains and an unusual life history that combines high reproductive output with slow childhood growth and exceptional longevity. This suite of derived traits suggests major changes in energy expenditure and allocation in the human lineage, but direct measures of human and ape metabolism are needed to compare evolved energy strategies among hominoids. Here we used doubly labelled water measurements of total energy expenditure (TEE; kcal day(-1)) in humans, chimpanzees, bonobos, gorillas and orangutans to test the hypothesis that the human lineage has experienced an acceleration in metabolic rate, providing energy for larger brains and faster reproduction without sacrificing maintenance and longevity. In multivariate regressions including body size and physical activity, human TEE exceeded that of chimpanzees and bonobos, gorillas and orangutans by approximately 400, 635 and 820 kcal day(-1), respectively, readily accommodating the cost of humans' greater brain size and reproductive output. Much of the increase in TEE is attributable to humans' greater basal metabolic rate (kcal day(-1)), indicating increased organ metabolic activity. Humans also had the greatest body fat percentage. An increased metabolic rate, along with changes in energy allocation, was crucial in the evolution of human brain size and life history
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Control and Function of Arm Swing in Human Walking and Running
We investigated the control and function of arm swing in human walking and running to test the hypothesis that the arms act as
passive mass dampers powered by movement of the lower body, rather than being actively driven by the shoulder muscles. We
measured locomotor cost, deltoid muscle activity and kinematics in 10 healthy adult subjects while walking and running on a
treadmill in three experimental conditions: control; no arms (arms folded across the chest); and arm weights (weights worn at the
elbow). Decreasing and increasing the moment of inertia of the upper body in no arms and arm weights conditions, respectively,
had corresponding effects on head yaw and on the phase differences between shoulder and pelvis rotation, consistent with the
view of arms as mass dampers. Angular acceleration of the shoulders and arm increased with torsion of the trunk and shoulder,
respectively, but angular acceleration of the shoulders was not inversely related to angular acceleration of the pelvis or arm.
Restricting arm swing in no arms trials had no effect on locomotor cost. Anterior and posterior portions of the deltoid contracted
simultaneously rather than firing alternately to drive the arm. These results support a passive arm swing hypothesis for upper
body movement during human walking and running, in which the trunk and shoulders act primarily as elastic linkages between
the pelvis, shoulder girdle and arms, the arms act as passive mass dampers which reduce torso and head rotation, and upper
body movement is primarily powered by lower body movement.AnthropologyHuman Evolutionary Biolog
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POLÍTICAS DE FINANCIAMENTO DA EDUCAÇÃO BÁSICA: A VALORIZAÇÃO DOS PROFISSIONAIS DO MAGISTÉRIO NA REDE MUNICIPAL DE ENSINO DE SÃO MATEUS/ES
Esta dissertação tem como objetivo analisar a gestão dos recursos do Fundeb e sua influência nas políticas de valorização dos profissionais do magistério no Município de São Mateus/ES, no período de 2007 a 2015, buscando verificar como o fundo contribuiu para assegurar essas políticas. Para isso, analisamos as legislações de regulamentação do financiamento da educação, de implantação do Fundef e do Fundeb e as normas que asseguram a carreira do magistério do Município estudado. A metodologia utilizada de pesquisa foi qualitativa, apresentando reflexões acerca do financiamento da educação básica, com base em levantamento bibliográfico e documental. Para discussão e análise, realizamos em um primeiro momento estudo das características e políticas de financiamento no Brasil e as influências do Estado burocrático para a efetivação dessas políticas. Em seguida, analisamos os dados financeiros e educacionais do Município relacionados aos fundos e as políticas implantadas no que dizem respeito a valorização do magistério após o Fundeb. Realizamos ainda, estudos da interferência dos recursos destinados à educação na oferta de matrículas na Rede Municipal. Concluiu-se que, o Fundeb se constitui em instrumento efetivo para a garantia de políticas positivas de valorização do magistério implantadas no Município de São Mateus, principalmente no que se refere ao Plano de Cargos, Carreira e Remuneração o que consequentemente incentivou a busca por formação inicial e continuada por parte dos profissionais da educação
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Trabecular Bone in the Bird Knee Responds with High Sensitivity to Changes in Load Orientation
Wolff’s law of trajectorial orientation proposes that trabecular struts align with the orientation of dominant compressive loads within a joint. Although widely considered in skeletal biology, Wolff’s law has never been experimentally tested while controlling for ontogenetic stage, activity level, and species differences, all factors that may affect trabecular bone growth. Here we report an experimental test of Wolff’s law using a within-species design in age-matched subjects experiencing physiologically normal levels of bone strain. Two age-matched groups of juvenile guinea fowl Numida meleagris ran on a treadmill set at either 0° (Level group) or 20° (Incline group), for 10·min per day over a 45-day treatment period. Birds running on the 20° inclined treadmill used more-flexed knees than those in the Level group at midstance (the point of peak ground reaction force). This difference in joint posture enabled us to test the sensitivity of trabecular alignment to altered load orientation in the knee. Using a new radon transform-based method for measuring trabecular orientation, our analysis shows that the fine trabecular bone in the distal femur has a high degree of correspondence between changes in joint angle and trabecular orientation. The sensitivity of this response supports the prediction that trabecular bone adapts dynamically to the orientation of
peak compressive forces.Anthropolog
Biomechanics of Running Indicates Endothermy in Bipedal Dinosaurs
One of the great unresolved controversies in paleobiology is whether extinct dinosaurs were endothermic, ectothermic, or some combination thereof, and when endothermy first evolved in the lineage leading to birds. Although it is well established that high, sustained growth rates and, presumably, high activity levels are ancestral for dinosaurs and pterosaurs (clade Ornithodira), other independent lines of evidence for high metabolic rates, locomotor costs, or endothermy are needed. For example, some studies have suggested that, because large dinosaurs may have been homeothermic due to their size alone and could have had heat loss problems, ectothermy would be a more plausible metabolic strategy for such animals.Here we describe two new biomechanical approaches for reconstructing the metabolic rate of 14 extinct bipedal dinosauriforms during walking and running. These methods, well validated for extant animals, indicate that during walking and slow running the metabolic rate of at least the larger extinct dinosaurs exceeded the maximum aerobic capabilities of modern ectotherms, falling instead within the range of modern birds and mammals. Estimated metabolic rates for smaller dinosaurs are more ambiguous, but generally approach or exceed the ectotherm boundary.Our results support the hypothesis that endothermy was widespread in at least larger non-avian dinosaurs. It was plausibly ancestral for all dinosauriforms (perhaps Ornithodira), but this is perhaps more strongly indicated by high growth rates than by locomotor costs. The polarity of the evolution of endothermy indicates that rapid growth, insulation, erect postures, and perhaps aerobic power predated advanced “avian” lung structure and high locomotor costs
Hip extensor mechanics and the evolution of walking and climbing capabilities in humans, apes, and fossil hominins
The evolutionary emergence of humans’ remarkably economical walking gait remains a focus of research and debate, but experimentally validated approaches linking locomotor capability to postcranial anatomy are limited. In this study, we integrated 3D morphometrics of hominoid pelvic shape with experimental measurements of hip kinematics and kinetics during walking and climbing, hamstring activity, and passive range of hip extension in humans, apes, and other primates to assess arboreal–terrestrial trade-offs in ischium morphology among living taxa. We show that hamstring-powered hip extension during habitual walking and climbing in living apes and humans is strongly predicted, and likely constrained, by the relative length and orientation of the ischium. Ape pelves permit greater extensor moments at the hip, enhancing climbing capability, but limit their range of hip extension, resulting in a crouched gait. Human pelves reduce hip extensor moments but permit a greater degree of hip extension, which greatly improves walking economy (i.e., distance traveled/energy consumed). Applying these results to fossil pelves suggests that early hominins differed from both humans and extant apes in having an economical walking gait without sacrificing climbing capability. Ardipithecus was capable of nearly human-like hip extension during bipedal walking, but retained the capacity for powerful, ape-like hip extension during vertical climbing. Hip extension capability was essentially human-like in Australopithecus afarensis and Australopithecus africanus, suggesting an economical walking gait but reduced mechanical advantage for powered hip extension during climbing
Lipid-lowering effect of maize-based traditional Mexican food on a metabolic syndrome model in rats
Lucy's Flat Feet: The Relationship between the Ankle and Rearfoot Arching in Early Hominins
BACKGROUND. In the Plio-Pleistocene, the hominin foot evolved from a grasping appendage to a stiff, propulsive lever. Central to this transition was the development of the longitudinal arch, a structure that helps store elastic energy and stiffen the foot during bipedal locomotion. Direct evidence for arch evolution, however, has been somewhat elusive given the failure of soft-tissue to fossilize. Paleoanthropologists have relied on footprints and bony correlates of arch development, though little consensus has emerged as to when the arch evolved. METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPAL FINDINGS. Here, we present evidence from radiographs of modern humans (n=261) that the set of the distal tibia in the sagittal plane, henceforth referred to as the tibial arch angle, is related to rearfoot arching. Non-human primates have a posteriorly directed tibial arch angle, while most humans have an anteriorly directed tibial arch angle. Those humans with a posteriorly directed tibial arch angle (8%) have significantly lower talocalcaneal and talar declination angles, both measures of an asymptomatic flatfoot. Application of these results to the hominin fossil record reveals that a well developed rearfoot arch had evolved in Australopithecus afarensis. However, as in humans today, Australopithecus populations exhibited individual variation in foot morphology and arch development, and "Lucy" (A.L. 288-1), a 3.18 Myr-old female Australopithecus, likely possessed asymptomatic flat feet. Additional distal tibiae from the Plio-Pleistocene show variation in tibial arch angles, including two early Homo tibiae that also have slightly posteriorly directed tibial arch angles. CONCLUSIONS/SIGNIFICANCE. This study finds that the rearfoot arch was present in the genus Australopithecus. However, the female Australopithecus afarensis "Lucy" has an ankle morphology consistent with non-pathological flat-footedness. This study suggests that, as in humans today, there was variation in arch development in Plio-Pleistocene hominins.Leakey Foundatio
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