Shape of the orbital opening: individual characterization and analysis of variability in modern humans, Gorilla gorilla, and Pan troglodytes.

The description of the human orbital shape is principally qualitative in the classical literature, and characterised by adjectives such as circular, rectangular or quadrangular. In order to provide a precise quantification and interpretation of this shape, a study based on automatic image analysis and Fourier analysis was carried out on 45 human skulls (30 males, 15 females), and for comparison on 61 skulls of Gorilla gorilla (40 males, 21 females), and 34 skulls of Pan troglodytes (20 males, 14 females). Sexual dimorphism in the shape of the orbital opening was not demonstrated. Its dominant morphological features could be characterized by Fourier analysis; elliptical elongation and quadrangularity were dominant morphological features of the shape of the orbital opening in the three species. Elliptical elongation was more marked in humans and Pan, whereas quadrangularity was particularly emphasized in Gorilla. An intraspecific variability of the shape of the orbital opening existed in humans, Gorilla and Pan, and seemed close in the three species. Interspecific partition between humans, Gorilla and Pan was demonstrated despite the variability observed in the three species studied. Interspecific differences between Gorilla and the Pan-humans group were principally explained by the differences in quadrangularity, and by differences in orientation of triangularity and pentagonality. Differences in the shape of the orbital opening between humans and Pan were principally explained by differences in hexagonality, and by differences in orientation of quadrangularity. A closeness of shape between some humans and some individuals in Pan and, to a lesser degree, with some individuals in Gorilla was observed, demonstrating the existence of a morphological continuum of the shape of the orbital opening in hominoids.

[1]  M. Schmittbuhl,et al.  Shape of the piriform aperture in Gorilla gorilla, Pan troglodytes, and modern Homo sapiens: characterization and polymorphism analysis. , 1998, American journal of physical anthropology.

[2]  P. O'higgins,et al.  Sexual dimorphism in hominoids: further studies of craniofacial shape differences in Pan, Gorilla and Pongo , 1993 .

[3]  The relationship between age, size and shape in the upper thoracic vertebrae of the mouse. , 1988, Journal of anatomy.

[4]  P. O'higgins,et al.  An investigation into the use of Fourier coefficients in characterizing cranial shape in primates , 1987 .

[5]  P. O'higgins,et al.  The inheritance of vertebral shape in the mouse. I. A study using Fourier analysis to examine patterns of inheritance in the morphology of cervical and upper thoracic vertebrae. , 1992, Journal of anatomy.

[6]  H. Uytterschaut Sexual dimorphism in human skulls. A comparison of sexual dimorphism in different populations , 1986 .

[7]  P. O'higgins,et al.  Measurement of biological shape: a general method applied to mouse vertebrae. , 1985, Journal of embryology and experimental morphology.

[8]  Raymond A. Christopher,et al.  FOURIER SERIES AS A QUANTITATIVE DESCRIPTOR OF MIOSPORE SHAPE , 1974 .

[9]  W. J. Moore,et al.  Patterns of cranial sexual dimorphism in certain groups of extant hominoids , 1990 .

[10]  A. Roche,et al.  Cranial base shape variation with age: a longitudinal study of shape using Fourier analysis. , 1986, Human biology.

[11]  P. O'higgins,et al.  The inheritance of vertebral shape in the mouse. II. A study using Fourier analysis to examine the inheritance of patterns of vertebral variation in the cervical and upper thoracic vertebral column. , 1993, Journal of anatomy.