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1 gly dexterous manipulation, concomitant with bipedalism.
2 tempo was within the genus' range of "solo" bipedalism.
3 tween two captive chimpanzees - synchronized bipedalism.
4 apabilities associated with an early form of bipedalism.
5 ally modified during the human transition to bipedalism.
6 erhaps resulting in a less efficient form of bipedalism.
7 es indicate a foot well adapted for striding bipedalism.
8 specialized foot that reflects our obligate bipedalism.
9 tions for understanding the origins of human bipedalism.
10 inin evolution, including the development of bipedalism.
11 e a new hypothesis for the origin of hominin bipedalism.
12 of the unique hominin locomotor adaptation, bipedalism.
13 cerning the mode of locomotion that preceded bipedalism.
14 gular bouts of both climbing and terrestrial bipedalism.
15 critical for understanding the evolution of bipedalism.
16 tatistically associated with both flight and bipedalism.
17 nna habitats were a catalyst for terrestrial bipedalism.
19 uge dimensions, massive skulls, and obligate bipedalism.(1)(,)(2) Another group that follows this pat
21 ormation, comparison of self to others), and bipedalism (a speculative developmental hypothesis about
27 d cognitive abilities, complex vocal organs, bipedalism and opposable thumbs--most (if not all) are l
30 ation has arisen because of the evolution of bipedalism and subsequently, in the last million years,
32 feet provide insights into the evolution of bipedalism and, together with the rest of the skeleton,
33 ffers little information about the origin of bipedalism, and despite nearly a century of research on
34 ost frequently co-occur with humans, such as bipedalism, and retrieval of information that determines
40 the earliest postcranial evidence of hominin bipedalism, but their functional and phylogenetic affini
41 knee adapted to the biomechanical demands of bipedalism by altering chondrocyte developmental program
42 width, hip adduction, and pelvic list during bipedalism by altering step widths and pelvic motions in
45 ies of humans, which were made possible when bipedalism emancipated the arms, enabled foragers to hun
47 Understanding when and why these aspects of bipedalism evolved also requires an understanding of how
48 restriality, and provide evidence that human bipedalism evolved from a more arboreal ancestor occupyi
49 of debate, it remains unclear whether human bipedalism evolved from a terrestrial knuckle-walking an
50 omponent of the hominin adaptive niche, with bipedalism evolving in an arboreal context, likely drive
51 there is debate about when modern human-like bipedalism first appeared in hominins, all known South A
52 ure for traits and behaviors in Homo such as bipedalism, flexible diets, and complex social structure
56 ipedal walking in chimpanzees, indicate that bipedalism in early, ape-like hominins could indeed have
57 have been proposed to explain the origin of bipedalism in hominins and suspension in great apes (hom
62 skeletons show many derived adaptations for bipedalism, including an elongated lumbar region, both i
63 ith lumbar lordosis and other adaptations to bipedalism, including an increase in the width of interv
70 ermed the Decoupling Hypothesis, posits that bipedalism is an adaptation that enables the shoulder to
74 hese characteristic frontal-plane aspects of bipedalism likely play a role in balance and energy mini
75 strength of primate hand preference and that bipedalism may have facilitated species-typical right-ha
77 energy-saving adaptations such as economical bipedalism or sophisticated tool use that decrease subsi
80 nvestigate the long-standing hypothesis that bipedalism reduced the energy cost of walking compared w
81 aspects of the hominin ankle associated with bipedalism remain compatible with vertical climbing and
83 ed to increased encephalization and obligate bipedalism, resulting in relative enlargement of the par
84 reased terrestriality selecting for habitual bipedalism, results indicate that trees remained an esse
85 n hominins show morphological adaptations to bipedalism, suggesting that this was their predominant m
86 ity to investigate the ecological drivers of bipedalism that cannot be addressed via the fossil recor
87 rch was a key step in the evolution of human bipedalism that predates the genus Homo by at least 1.5
88 ough birth canals that were reconfigured for bipedalism (the "obstetric dilemma"), (ii) high early po
90 s that the evolutionary precursor of hominin bipedalism was African ape-like terrestrial quadrupedali