Faculty

Kristi L. Lewton

Kristi L. Lewton

Associate Professor of Clinical Integrative Anatomical Sciences;Director, M.S. Program in Integrative Anatomical Sciences
Medicine
BMT 405A 1333 San Pablo Street Health Sciences Campus Los Angeles

University of Southern California: Undergraduate Research Associates Program, 2017-2018

University of Southern California: Zumberge Individual Research Award, 2017-2018

American Association of Anatomists: Short-Term Visiting Scholarship, 2016

Keck School of Medicine of USC: Year I Faculty Teaching Award, 2016

Harvard University: Certificate of Teaching Excellence, 2013

American Association of Physical Anthropologists: Mildred Trotter Prize, 2010

Arizona State University: Dean's Advanced Scholarship, 2008-2010

School of Human Evolution and Social Change, Arizona State University: Donald H. Morris Award, 2008

Arizona State University: NSF IGERT Fellowship in Neural and Musculoskeletal Adaptations in Form and Function, 2002-2006

Ape femoral-humeral rigidities and arboreal locomotion Am J Biol Anthropol. 2022 Dec; 179(4):624-639. . View in PubMed

A geometric morphometric approach to investigate primate proximal phalanx diaphysis shape Am J Biol Anthropol. 2022 03; 177(3):581-602. . View in PubMed

Integrative approaches to dispersing science: A case study of March Mammal Madness Am J Hum Biol. 2022 02; 34 Suppl 1:e23659. . View in PubMed

Bone volume in the distal calcaneus correlates with body size but not leap frequency in galagids Am J Biol Anthropol. 2022 01; 177(1):27-38. . View in PubMed

The developmental impacts of natural selection on human pelvic morphology Sci Adv. 2022 08 19; 8(33):eabq4884. . View in PubMed

March Mammal Madness and the power of narrative in science outreach Elife. 2021 02 22; 10. . View in PubMed

Hip Adduction during Running: Influence of Sex, Hip Abductor Strength and Activation, and Pelvis and Femur Morphology Med Sci Sports Exerc. 2021 11 01; 53(11):2346-2353. . View in PubMed

Calcaneal elongation and bone strength in leaping galagids Am J Phys Anthropol. 2020 03; 171(3):430-438. . View in PubMed

The effects of phylogeny, body size, and locomotor behavior on the three-dimensional shape of the pelvis in extant carnivorans PeerJ. 2020; 8:e8574. . View in PubMed

Evaluation of Articular Surface Similarity of Hemi-Hamate Grafts and Proximal Middle Phalanx Morphology: A 3D Geometric Morphometric Approach J Hand Surg Am. 2019 Feb; 44(2):121-128. . View in PubMed

Exercise-induced loading increases ilium cortical area in a selectively bred mouse model Am J Phys Anthropol. 2019 03; 168(3):543-551. . View in PubMed

Ischial Form as an Indicator of Bipedal Kinematics in Early Hominins: A Test Using Extant Anthropoids Anat Rec (Hoboken). 2017 05; 300(5):845-858. . View in PubMed

International Encyclopedia of PrimatologyEd: Fuentes, A. Bipedalism. 2017. . View in PubMed

The effects of captive versus wild rearing environments on long bone articular surfaces in common chimpanzees (Pan troglodytes) PeerJ. 2017; 5:e3668. . View in PubMed

Morphological convergence in the pubis of slow-moving primates and xenarthrans Am J Phys Anthropol. 2016 11; 161(3):381-397. . View in PubMed

In vitro bone strain distributions in a sample of primate pelves J Anat. 2015 May; 226(5):458-77. . View in PubMed

From the ground up: Integrative research in primate locomotion Am J Phys Anthropol. 2015 Apr; 156(4):495-7. . View in PubMed

Allometric scaling and locomotor function in the primate pelvis Am J Phys Anthropol. 2015 Apr; 156(4):511-30. . View in PubMed

A partial hominoid innominate from the Miocene of Pakistan: description and preliminary analyses Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2015 Jan 06; 112(1):82-7. . View in PubMed

A wider pelvis does not increase locomotor cost in humans, with implications for the evolution of childbirth PLoS One. 2015; 10(3):e0118903. . View in PubMed

Pelvic form and locomotor adaptation in strepsirrhine primates Anat Rec (Hoboken). 2015 Jan; 298(1):230-48. . View in PubMed

Evolvability of the primate pelvic girdle Evolutionary Biology. 2012; 39(1):126-139. . View in PubMed

American Anthropologist Complexity in biological anthropology in 2011: speciesreproductionand sociality. 2012; 114(2):196-202. . View in PubMed

Kristi Lewton is a biological anthropologist and evolutionary anatomist, and is an Associate Professor at the Keck School of Medicine. Kristi received her bachelor's degree from the University of Washington, her master's and doctoral degrees from the School of Human Evolution and Social Change at Arizona State University, and a postdoctoral preceptorship at Harvard University.

Kristi Lewton's research focuses on the evolution of primate locomotor systems. She studies the anatomy and biomechanics of human and non-human primate hindlimbs to understand the evolution of these structures, integrating both comparative morphometric and experimental approaches. Her current work focuses on identifying adaptations to locomotion in the pelvis; examining patterns of integration, modularity, and evolvability of the pelvic girdle in primates, carnivores, and mice; and investigating the relationship between pelvic anatomy and metabolic cost of locomotion in humans. In addition to museum and laboratory research, Kristi has conducted paleoanthropological fieldwork surveying for hominin fossils in South Africa and Ethiopia.

At the Keck School of Medicine, Kristi teaches human gross anatomy to first and second year medical students and graduate students.

Kristi maintains Adjunct Professor appointments in the Department of Biological Sciences in Dornsife College and in the Division of Biokinesiology and Physical Therapy in the Herman Ostrow School of Dentistry. In addition, she is a Research Associate in Mammalogy at the Natural History Museum of Los Angeles County.
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