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Abstract

The stiff human foot enables an efficient push-off when walking or running, and was critical for the evolution of bipedalism1-6. The uniquely arched morphology of the human midfoot is thought to stiffen it5-9, whereas other primates have flat feet that bend severely in the midfoot7,10,11. However, the relationship between midfoot geometry and stiffness remains debated in foot biomechanics12,13, podiatry14,15 and palaeontology4-6. These debates centre on the medial longitudinal arch5,6 and have not considered whether stiffness is affected by the second, transverse tarsal arch of the human foot16. Here we show that the transverse tarsal arch, acting through the inter-metatarsal tissues, is responsible for more than 40% of the longitudinal stiffness of the foot. The underlying principle resembles a floppy currency note that stiffens considerably when it curls transversally. We derive a dimensionless curvature parameter that governs the stiffness contribution of the transverse tarsal arch, demonstrate its predictive power using mechanical models ofthe foot and find its skeletal correlate in hominin feet. In the foot, the material properties of the intermetatarsal tissues and the mobility of the metatarsals may additionally influence the longitudinal stiffness of the foot and thus the curvature-stiffness relationship of the transverse tarsal arch. By analysing fossils, we track the evolution of the curvature parameter among extinct hominins and show that a human-like transverse arch was a key step in the evolution of human bipedalism that predates the genus Homo by at least 1.5 million years. This renewed understanding ofthe foot may improve the clinical treatment of flatfoot disorders, the design of robotic feet and the study of foot function in locomotion.

Details

Title
Stiffness of the human foot and evolution of the transverse arch
Author
Venkadesan, Madhusudhan 1 ; Yawar, Ali 1 ; Eng, Carolyn M 1 ; Dias, Marcelo A 2 ; Singh, Dhiraj K 3 ; Tommasini, Steven M; Haims, Andrew H; Bandi, Mahesh M; Mandre, Shreyas

 Department of Mechanical Engineering and Materials Science, Yale University, New Haven, CT, USA 
 School of Science, Aalto University, Espoo, Finland 
 Nonlinear and Non-equilibrium Physics Unit, OIST Graduate University, Onna, Japan 
Pages
97-3,100A-100L
Section
Article
Publication year
2020
Publication date
Mar 5, 2020
Publisher
Nature Publishing Group
ISSN
00280836
e-ISSN
14764687
Source type
Scholarly Journal
Language of publication
English
ProQuest document ID
2377370142
Copyright
Copyright Nature Publishing Group Mar 5, 2020