|
|
Showing 1 - 9 of
9 matches in All Departments
These two volumes demonstrate the role of cellular mechanisms in
the production of the many specialized traits defining primates. By
exploring gene activity transforming into evolutionary change
through the work of cellular mechanisms, the goal is to encourage
others to adopt evolutionary cell biology as an approach to the
genotype-phenotype map of the diversification of primates, human
variation, and human evolution. Contributors highlight how genetic
analysis, visualization of cells and tissues, and merging Evo-Devo
with evolutionary cell biology combine to answer questions central
to understanding the human and primate evolution. Key Features
Explores the developmental basis of characteristics that define the
primate lineage Documents cellular mechanisms associated with
everything from skin and eneregetics to the brain and
communication. Chapters by a team of leading international
researchers
Many complex traits define the human condition, including
encephalization and bipedalism. The specific molecular signals and
cellular processes producing these traits are the result of
dramatic evolutionary change. At the same time, conservation of
many of these developmental programs underlie both structure and
function. Novel methodologies and techniques allow analysis of the
collective behavior of cells, cell shapes, tissues, and organs.
This volume demonstrates the essential role of cellular mechanisms
in the evolutionary increase in the size and complexity of the
primate brain. In addition, and concordant with encephalization,
this book documents changes in the muscles and bones associated
with the appearance of bipedalism. Genetic changes are the basis of
these evolutionary changes, but transformation of genetic
information into phenotypic outcomes occurs at the level of the
cell, and this is the focus of the book. The goal is to encourage
others to adopt evolutionary cell biology as a novel and necessary
approach to the genotype-phenotype map of the diversification of
primates, human variation, and human evolution. The contributors to
this book utilize advances in genetic analysis, visualization of
cells and tissues, and the merging of evolutionary developmental
biology with evolutionary cell biology to address questions central
to understanding the human and primate evolution. Key Features
Explores mechanisms underlying trait distribution, dispersal,
variation, and evolution through the direct testing of hypotheses
especially with respect to patterns of encephalization, certain
sensory modalities, and growth and life history specializations.
Documents the advantages for anthropologists to work at the level
of cells focusing on how genes provide instructions for cells to
make structure and how environmental influences affect the behavior
of cells. Illustrates the role cell biology plays with respect to
encephalization, neocortical expansion, variation in facial
morphology, locomotion, and dexterity. Describes novel
methodologies and techniques allowing analysis of how the
collective behavior of cells shapes tissues and organs. Related
Titles Ripamonti, U., ed. Induction of Bone Formation in Primates:
The Transforming Growth Factor-beta 3 (ISBN 978-0-3673-7740-3).
Gordon, M. S., et al., eds. Animal Locomotion: Physical Principles
and Adaptations (ISBN 978-0-3676-5795-6) Bianchi, L. Developmental
Neurobiology (ISBN 978-0-8153-4482-7)
Many complex traits define the primate condition, including
behaviors as fundamental as locomotion and traits as scrutinized as
the dentition, and their study reveals dramatic evolutionary change
across the primates. Genetic modifications are at the basis of
these changes, but transformation of genetic information into
phenotypes occurs at the level of the cell, which is the focus of
this book. Contributors summarize novel methodologies to analyze
the collective behavior of cells in forming tissues and organs
influencing physiological functions and anatomical features that
enable behaviors. Our goal is to review current knowledge and
encourage others to adopt evolutionary cell biology to aid in
deciphering the genotype-phenotype map that underlies the
diversification of primates, human variation, and human evolution.
The contributors to this book utilize advances in genetic analysis
and visualization of cells and tissues and merge evolutionary
developmental biology with evolutionary cell biology to address
questions central to understanding human and primate evolution. Key
Features Explores mechanisms underlying trait development,
distribution, variation, and evolution, especially with respect to
pigmentation, dental formulae, the skeleton, energetics, and
temperature-related morphological variation Documents the
advantages for anthropologists to work at the level of cells,
focusing on how genes provide instructions for cells to make
structure and how environment affects the behavior of cells
Illustrates the role cell biology plays in pelage growth and
pigmentation, facial morphology, melanin production in
pigmentation, dental development and tooth loss, and energy
expenditure Describes novel methodologies and techniques to analyze
environment- and temperature-related influences on phenotypes
Demonstrates how significant changes in life history occur at the
level of the cell Related Titles Bianchi, L. Developmental
Neurobiology (ISBN 978-0-8153-4482-7) King, G. R. Primate Behavior
and Human Origins (ISBN 978-1-138-85317-1) Rhys Evans, P. H. The
Waterside Ape: An Alternate Account of Human Evolution (ISBN
978-0-367-14548-4)
Many complex traits define the human condition, including
encephalization and bipedalism. The specific molecular signals and
cellular processes producing these traits are the result of
dramatic evolutionary change. At the same time, conservation of
many of these developmental programs underlie both structure and
function. Novel methodologies and techniques allow analysis of the
collective behavior of cells, cell shapes, tissues, and organs.
This volume demonstrates the essential role of cellular mechanisms
in the evolutionary increase in the size and complexity of the
primate brain. In addition, and concordant with encephalization,
this book documents changes in the muscles and bones associated
with the appearance of bipedalism. Genetic changes are the basis of
these evolutionary changes, but transformation of genetic
information into phenotypic outcomes occurs at the level of the
cell, and this is the focus of the book. The goal is to encourage
others to adopt evolutionary cell biology as a novel and necessary
approach to the genotype-phenotype map of the diversification of
primates, human variation, and human evolution. The contributors to
this book utilize advances in genetic analysis, visualization of
cells and tissues, and the merging of evolutionary developmental
biology with evolutionary cell biology to address questions central
to understanding the human and primate evolution. Key Features
Explores mechanisms underlying trait distribution, dispersal,
variation, and evolution through the direct testing of hypotheses
especially with respect to patterns of encephalization, certain
sensory modalities, and growth and life history specializations.
Documents the advantages for anthropologists to work at the level
of cells focusing on how genes provide instructions for cells to
make structure and how environmental influences affect the behavior
of cells. Illustrates the role cell biology plays with respect to
encephalization, neocortical expansion, variation in facial
morphology, locomotion, and dexterity. Describes novel
methodologies and techniques allowing analysis of how the
collective behavior of cells shapes tissues and organs. Related
Titles Ripamonti, U., ed. Induction of Bone Formation in Primates:
The Transforming Growth Factor-beta 3 (ISBN 978-0-3673-7740-3).
Gordon, M. S., et al., eds. Animal Locomotion: Physical Principles
and Adaptations (ISBN 978-0-3676-5795-6) Bianchi, L. Developmental
Neurobiology (ISBN 978-0-8153-4482-7)
Many complex traits define the primate condition, including
behaviors as fundamental as locomotion and traits as scrutinized as
the dentition, and their study reveals dramatic evolutionary change
across the primates. Genetic modifications are at the basis of
these changes, but transformation of genetic information into
phenotypes occurs at the level of the cell, which is the focus of
this book. Contributors summarize novel methodologies to analyze
the collective behavior of cells in forming tissues and organs
influencing physiological functions and anatomical features that
enable behaviors. Our goal is to review current knowledge and
encourage others to adopt evolutionary cell biology to aid in
deciphering the genotype-phenotype map that underlies the
diversification of primates, human variation, and human evolution.
The contributors to this book utilize advances in genetic analysis
and visualization of cells and tissues and merge evolutionary
developmental biology with evolutionary cell biology to address
questions central to understanding human and primate evolution. Key
Features Explores mechanisms underlying trait development,
distribution, variation, and evolution, especially with respect to
pigmentation, dental formulae, the skeleton, energetics, and
temperature-related morphological variation Documents the
advantages for anthropologists to work at the level of cells,
focusing on how genes provide instructions for cells to make
structure and how environment affects the behavior of cells
Illustrates the role cell biology plays in pelage growth and
pigmentation, facial morphology, melanin production in
pigmentation, dental development and tooth loss, and energy
expenditure Describes novel methodologies and techniques to analyze
environment- and temperature-related influences on phenotypes
Demonstrates how significant changes in life history occur at the
level of the cell Related Titles Bianchi, L. Developmental
Neurobiology (ISBN 978-0-8153-4482-7) King, G. R. Primate Behavior
and Human Origins (ISBN 978-1-138-85317-1) Rhys Evans, P. H. The
Waterside Ape: An Alternate Account of Human Evolution (ISBN
978-0-367-14548-4)
Natural scientists perceive and classify organisms primarily on the
basis of their appearance and structure- their form , defined as
that characteristic remaining invariant after translation,
rotation, and possibly reflection of the object. The quantitative
study of form and form change comprises the field of morphometrics.
For morphometrics to succeed, it needs techniques that not only
satisfy mathematical and statistical rigor but also attend to the
scientific issues. An Invariant Approach to the Statistical
Analysis of Shapes results from a long and fruitful collaboration
between a mathematical statistician and a biologist. Together they
have developed a methodology that addresses the importance of
scientific relevance, biological variability, and invariance of the
statistical and scientific inferences with respect to the arbitrary
choice of the coordinate system. They present the history and
foundations of morphometrics, discuss the various kinds of data
used in the analysis of form, and provide justification for
choosing landmark coordinates as a preferred data type. They
describe the statistical models used to represent intra-population
variability of landmark data and show that arbitrary translation,
rotation, and reflection of the objects introduce infinitely many
nuisance parameters. The most fundamental part of
morphometrics-comparison of forms-receives in-depth treatment, as
does the study of growth and growth patterns, classification,
clustering, and asymmetry. Morphometrics has only recently begun to
consider the invariance principle and its implications for the
study of biological form. With the advantage of dual perspectives,
An Invariant Approach to the Statistical Analysis of Shapes stands
as a unique and important work that brings a decade's worth of
innovative methods, observations, and insights to an audience of
both statisticians and biologists.
These two volumes demonstrate the role of cellular mechanisms in
the production of the many specialized traits defining primates. By
exploring gene activity transforming into evolutionary change
through the work of cellular mechanisms, the goal is to encourage
others to adopt evolutionary cell biology as an approach to the
genotype-phenotype map of the diversification of primates, human
variation, and human evolution. Contributors highlight how genetic
analysis, visualization of cells and tissues, and merging Evo-Devo
with evolutionary cell biology combine to answer questions central
to understanding the human and primate evolution. Key Features
Explores the developmental basis of characteristics that define the
primate lineage Documents cellular mechanisms associated with
everything from skin and eneregetics to the brain and
communication. Chapters by a team of leading international
researchers
Natural scientists perceive and classify organisms primarily on the basis of their appearance and structure- their form , defined as that characteristic remaining invariant after translation, rotation, and possibly reflection of the object. The quantitative study of form and form change comprises the field of morphometrics. For morphometrics to succeed, it needs techniques that not only satisfy mathematical and statistical rigor but also attend to the scientific issues. An Invariant Approach to the Statistical Analysis of Shapes results from a long and fruitful collaboration between a mathematical statistician and a biologist. Together they have developed a methodology that addresses the importance of scientific relevance, biological variability, and invariance of the statistical and scientific inferences with respect to the arbitrary choice of the coordinate system. They present the history and foundations of morphometrics, discuss the various kinds of data used in the analysis of form, and provide justification for choosing landmark coordinates as a preferred data type. They describe the statistical models used to represent intra-population variability of landmark data and show that arbitrary translation, rotation, and reflection of the objects introduce infinitely many nuisance parameters. The most fundamental part of morphometrics-comparison of forms-receives in-depth treatment, as does the study of growth and growth patterns, classification, clustering, and asymmetry. Morphometrics has only recently begun to consider the invariance principle and its implications for the study of biological form. With the advantage of dual perspectives, An Invariant Approach to the Statistical Analysis of Shapes stands as a unique and important work that brings a decade's worth of innovative methods, observations, and insights to an audience of both statisticians and biologists.
Bone is the tissue most frequently recovered archaeologically and
is the material most commonly studied by biological
anthropologists, who are interested in how skeletons change shape
during growth and across evolutionary time. This volume brings
together a range of contemporary studies of bone growth and
development to highlight how cross-disciplinary research and new
methods can enhance our anthropological understanding of skeletal
variation. The novel use of imaging techniques from developmental
biology, advanced sequencing methods from genetics, and
perspectives from evolutionary developmental biology improve our
ability to understand the bases of modern human and primate
variation. Animal models can also be used to provide a broad
biological perspective to the systematic study of humans. This
volume is a testament to the drive of anthropologists to understand
biological and evolutionary processes that underlie changes in bone
morphology and illustrates the continued value of incorporating
multiple perspectives within anthropological inquiry.
|
You may like...
Music of Life
B. E. Boykin
Sheet music
R145
Discovery Miles 1 450
Silver Rain
B. E. Boykin
Sheet music
R145
Discovery Miles 1 450
|