Reworking geometric morphometrics into a methodology of transformation grids
Fred L. Bookstein

TL;DR
This paper proposes a new approach to geometric morphometrics that simplifies interpretation by replacing traditional Procrustes and thin-plate spline methods with transformation grids based on two-point registration, enhancing analysis of organismal shape differences.
Contribution
It introduces a rethinking of standard geometric morphometric methods, advocating for transformation grids and two-point registration to improve interpretability and applicability in biological studies.
Findings
New interpretation of classic cranial data sets
Demonstrates advantages of transformation grids over thin-plate splines
Suggests broader applicability of morphometric analysis methods
Abstract
Today's typical application of geometric morphometrics to a quantitative comparison of organismal anatomies begins by standardizing samples of homologously labelled point configurations for location, orientation, and scale, and then renders the ensuing comparisons graphically by thin-plate spline as applied to group averages, principal components, regression predictions, or canonical variates. The scale-standardization step has recently come under criticism as inappropriate, at least for growth studies. This essay argues for a similar rethinking of the centering and rotation, and then the replacement of the thin-plate spline interpolant of the resulting configurations by a different strategy that leaves unexplained residuals at every landmark individually in order to simplify the interpretation of the displayed grid as a whole, the "transformation grid" that has been highlighted as the…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMorphological variations and asymmetry · Evolution and Paleontology Studies
MethodsProcrustes
