Hominin Locomotion Laboratory
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STEUDEL, Karen L.

Karen SteudelContact Info:

Phone:  263.5079
Email: ksteudel@facstaff.wisc.edu
Office:  358 Birge

CV

Research Interests:

My research focuses on the relationship between locomotor structure and performance and in applying the results of those studies to our understanding of the evolution of locomotion in hominins. Assumptions about the biomechanical consequences of variations in bone structure are not always supported in direct tests. I have been very involved in discussions of the role of locomotor energetics in the evolution of bipedal posture and locomotion. I have shown that the cost of walking in modern humans is related to limb length, stature, mass and % fat. Relatively longer limbs result in lower locomotor costs. The short limbs of Australopithecus would have been very energetically costly. The fact that the short limbs were retained for at least a million years suggests that either some alternative selective pressure was at work or that these hominids did not travel long distances on the ground.  The relatively short limbed Neanderthals would have had costs of walking approximately 30% larger than the anatomically modern humans that replaced them. We are finding similar results in human running. We are looking at kinematic data to try to understand the basis for the economy of human walking and for why shorter limbs are so energetically costly. 

 

 
Karen Steudel

 


 

australopithecine on the treadmill