“…They used 3D geometric morphometrics (GMM) of sliding semilandmarks for analyzing 50 torso 3D models segmented from thoraco‐abdominopelvic computed tomography (CT) scans of two different adult populations, and found that modern human females showed mediolaterally narrower (lower) thoraces than their wide (upper) pelves and modern human males showed the opposite trend in both populations. These authors reported that sexual dimorphism would be the main factor driving thoraco‐pelvic covariation in adult H. sapiens , and their results are consistent with those of previous studies analyzing sex‐related variation in the thorax and pelvis separately (Bellemare et al, 2003; Fischer & Mitteroecker, 2015, 2017; García‐Martínez et al, 2016, 2019; LoMauro & Aliverti, 2018; Molgat‐Seon, Peters, & Sheel, 2018). Thus, Torres‐Tamayo et al (2018) proposed a new and more complex torso integration model in H. sapiens (torso integration hypothesis) that called into question the correspondence between a narrow thorax and a narrow pelvis classically reported for this species (Lovejoy, 2005; Middleton, 2013, 2015, 2017; Schultz, 1950, 1961; C. V. Ward, 1993).…”