Table of Contents:
  • Modern morphometrics / Dennis E. Slice
  • After landmarks / Fred L. Bookstein
  • Semilandmarks in three dimensions / Philipp Gunz, Philipp Mitteroecker and Fred L. Bookstein
  • An alternative approach to space curve analysis using the example of the Neanderthal occipital bun / David Paul Reddy, Katerina Harvati and Johann Kim
  • Correcting for the effect of orientation in geometric morphometric studies of side-view images of human heads / Waleed Gharaibeh
  • Fourier descriptors, Procrustes superimposition, and data dimensionality : an example of cranial shape analysis in modern human populations / Michel Baylac and Martin Friess
  • Problems with landmark-based morphometrics for fractal outlines : the case of frontal sinus ontogeny / Hermann Prossinger
  • An invariant approach to the study of fluctuating asymmetry : developmental instability in a mouse model for Down syndrome / Joan T. Richtsmeier, Theodore M. Cole III and Subhash R. Lele
  • Comparison of coordinate and craniometric data for biological distance studies / Ashley H. McKeown and Richard L. Jantz
  • Assessing craniofacial secular change in American blacks and whites using geometric morphometry / Daniel J. Wescott and Richard L. Jantz
  • Secular trends in craniofacial asymmetry studied by geometric morphometry and generalized Procrustes methods / Erin H. Kimmerle and Richard L. Jantz
  • The morphological integration of the hominoid skull : a partial least squares and PC analysis with implications for European middle Pleistocene mandibular variation / Markus Bastir, Antonio Rosas and H. David Sheets
  • A geometric morphometric analysis of late Pleistocene human metacarpal 1 base shape / Wesley Allan Niewoehner
  • A geometric morphometric assessment of the relationship between scapular variation and locomotion in African apes / Andrea B. Taylor and Dennis E. Slice
  • Functional shape variation in the cercopithecine masticatory complex / Michelle Singleton
  • A geometric morphometric assessment of the hominoid supraorbital region : affinities of the Eurasian Miocene hominoids Dryopithecus, Graecopithecus, and Sivapithecus / Kieran P. McNulty.