Mechanical and Thermal Food Processing Effects on Mastication and Cranio-Dental Morphology

Chimpanzees spend ~40% of their day chewing fruits, seeds, and tough leaves and pith, while in contrast modern humans spend significantly less time eating (5%), and the foods that they consume are extremely soft and processed. How have these differences, especially the advent and increasing use of...

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Main Author: Zink, Katherine Diane
Other Authors: Lieberman, Daniel Eric
Language:en_US
Published: Harvard University 2013
Subjects:
Online Access:http://dissertations.umi.com/gsas.harvard:10900
http://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:HUL.InstRepos:11124843
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spelling ndltd-harvard.edu-oai-dash.harvard.edu-1-111248432015-08-14T15:42:18ZMechanical and Thermal Food Processing Effects on Mastication and Cranio-Dental MorphologyZink, Katherine DianeBiologycookingfood processinghominin dietintegrationmasticationmaterial propertiesevolutiondevelopmentChimpanzees spend ~40% of their day chewing fruits, seeds, and tough leaves and pith, while in contrast modern humans spend significantly less time eating (5%), and the foods that they consume are extremely soft and processed. How have these differences, especially the advent and increasing use of foods processing techniques, influenced masticatory effort and ultimately the morphology of the jaws and teeth? This dissertation addresses this question by measuring the effects that early hominin food processing methods (slicing, pounding, and roasting) have on food material properties, masticatory performance and functional integration of the teeth and jaws. Using standard testing techniques, the material properties of plant tubers and meat were quantified. Processing had contrasting effects on the properties of these foods, and were correlated with masticatory performance changes measured in human experiments. Mechanical processing techniques decreased tuber toughness, leading to lower chew force (CF). Roasting further decreased tuber toughness and other material properties, which led to lower comminution efficiency (CE) and CF. In direct contrast to tubers, mechanical processing techniques did not alter meat toughness, yet did increase CF and CE. Roasting the meat also increased CF and CE, likely because of higher toughness and stiffness, coupled with less elastic energy loss. The generation of lower masticatory forces resulting from processing have undoubtedly affected cranio-dental morphology. In particular, it is hypothesized that forces functionally integrate the masticatory system, and reduced forces, especially in modern human populations, lead to malocclusions (dis-integration). An animal experiment was performed to test this hypothesis, and the results indicate that masticatory effort (eating hard or soft foods) coordinates jaw and dental growth. Further testing the hypothesis, the effects of morphology on masticatory function were studied by coupling subject masticatory performance with occlusal scores. Multiple regressions of occlusion and tooth size explained a high proportion of masticatory performance variance (significantly more than tooth size alone), suggesting that occlusal integration does indeed affect masticatory function. Taken together, the results of this dissertation document the significant reductions in hominin masticatory forces and changes in cranio-dental growth and integration that may have resulted from the use of food processing techniques.Human Evolutionary BiologyLieberman, Daniel Eric2013-09-30T14:12:26Z2013-09-3020132015-06-08T07:30:30ZThesis or DissertationZink, Katherine Diane. 2013. Mechanical and Thermal Food Processing Effects on Mastication and Cranio-Dental Morphology. Doctoral dissertation, Harvard University.http://dissertations.umi.com/gsas.harvard:10900http://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:HUL.InstRepos:11124843en_USopenhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:HUL.InstRepos:dash.current.terms-of-use#LAAHarvard University
collection NDLTD
language en_US
sources NDLTD
topic Biology
cooking
food processing
hominin diet
integration
mastication
material properties
evolution
development
spellingShingle Biology
cooking
food processing
hominin diet
integration
mastication
material properties
evolution
development
Zink, Katherine Diane
Mechanical and Thermal Food Processing Effects on Mastication and Cranio-Dental Morphology
description Chimpanzees spend ~40% of their day chewing fruits, seeds, and tough leaves and pith, while in contrast modern humans spend significantly less time eating (5%), and the foods that they consume are extremely soft and processed. How have these differences, especially the advent and increasing use of foods processing techniques, influenced masticatory effort and ultimately the morphology of the jaws and teeth? This dissertation addresses this question by measuring the effects that early hominin food processing methods (slicing, pounding, and roasting) have on food material properties, masticatory performance and functional integration of the teeth and jaws. Using standard testing techniques, the material properties of plant tubers and meat were quantified. Processing had contrasting effects on the properties of these foods, and were correlated with masticatory performance changes measured in human experiments. Mechanical processing techniques decreased tuber toughness, leading to lower chew force (CF). Roasting further decreased tuber toughness and other material properties, which led to lower comminution efficiency (CE) and CF. In direct contrast to tubers, mechanical processing techniques did not alter meat toughness, yet did increase CF and CE. Roasting the meat also increased CF and CE, likely because of higher toughness and stiffness, coupled with less elastic energy loss. The generation of lower masticatory forces resulting from processing have undoubtedly affected cranio-dental morphology. In particular, it is hypothesized that forces functionally integrate the masticatory system, and reduced forces, especially in modern human populations, lead to malocclusions (dis-integration). An animal experiment was performed to test this hypothesis, and the results indicate that masticatory effort (eating hard or soft foods) coordinates jaw and dental growth. Further testing the hypothesis, the effects of morphology on masticatory function were studied by coupling subject masticatory performance with occlusal scores. Multiple regressions of occlusion and tooth size explained a high proportion of masticatory performance variance (significantly more than tooth size alone), suggesting that occlusal integration does indeed affect masticatory function. Taken together, the results of this dissertation document the significant reductions in hominin masticatory forces and changes in cranio-dental growth and integration that may have resulted from the use of food processing techniques. === Human Evolutionary Biology
author2 Lieberman, Daniel Eric
author_facet Lieberman, Daniel Eric
Zink, Katherine Diane
author Zink, Katherine Diane
author_sort Zink, Katherine Diane
title Mechanical and Thermal Food Processing Effects on Mastication and Cranio-Dental Morphology
title_short Mechanical and Thermal Food Processing Effects on Mastication and Cranio-Dental Morphology
title_full Mechanical and Thermal Food Processing Effects on Mastication and Cranio-Dental Morphology
title_fullStr Mechanical and Thermal Food Processing Effects on Mastication and Cranio-Dental Morphology
title_full_unstemmed Mechanical and Thermal Food Processing Effects on Mastication and Cranio-Dental Morphology
title_sort mechanical and thermal food processing effects on mastication and cranio-dental morphology
publisher Harvard University
publishDate 2013
url http://dissertations.umi.com/gsas.harvard:10900
http://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:HUL.InstRepos:11124843
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