Advances and Challenges in Paleobiological Reconstructions of Joint Mobility

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Abstract

Paleobiological reconstructions of joint mobility are an essential component of functional analyses of extinct animals. Over the past half-decade, the methods underlying mobility studies have advanced rapidly in three main areas: increasing complexity of virtual joint manipulation, formalizing pose viability criteria, and constructing more rigorous quantitative frameworks. Here we contextualize and review the recent history of this field, and call attention to remaining challenges and potential future directions. Additionally, we make available and describe a set of user-friendly scripts for the animation software Autodesk Maya. In doing so, we aim to make many of the latest approaches for virtual mobility reconstruction more easily accessible to other researchers, encouraging their broader adoption and collaborative improvement.

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Manafzadeh, A. R., & Gatesy, S. M. (2022). Advances and Challenges in Paleobiological Reconstructions of Joint Mobility. In Integrative and Comparative Biology (Vol. 62, pp. 1369–1376). Oxford University Press. https://doi.org/10.1093/icb/icac008

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