Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Geneviève Perreard Lopreno is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Geneviève Perreard Lopreno.


American Journal of Physical Anthropology | 2015

Exploring the Relationship Between Entheseal Changes and Physical Activity: A Multivariate Study

Marco Milella; Francisca Alves Cardoso; Sandra Assis; Geneviève Perreard Lopreno; Nivien Speith

Analyses of entheseal changes (EC) in identified skeletal samples employ a common research strategy based on the comparison between occupations grouped on the basis of shared biomechanical and/or social characteristics. Results from this approach are often ambiguous, with some studies that point to differences in EC between occupational samples and others failing to provide evidence of behavioral effects on EC. Here we investigate patterns of EC among documented occupations by means of a multivariate analysis of robusticity scores in nine postcranial entheses from a large (N = 372) contemporary skeletal sample including specimens from one Italian and two Portuguese identified collections. Data on entheseal robusticity, analyzed by pooled sides as well by separated sides and levels of asymmetry, are converted in binary scores and then analyzed through nonlinear principal component analysis and hierarchical cluster analysis. Results of these analyses are then used for the classification of occupations. Differences between occupational classes are tested by MANOVA and pairwise Hotellings test. Results evidence three classes which separate occupations related to farming, physically demanding but generalized occupation, and physically undemanding occupations, with the more consistent differences between the first and the last classes. Our results are consistent with differences in biomechanical behavior between the occupations included in each class, and point to the physical and social specificity of farming activities. On the other hand, our study exemplifies the usefulness of alternative analytical protocols for the investigation of EC, and the value of research designs devoid of a priori assumptions for the test of biocultural hypotheses.


American Journal of Physical Anthropology | 2015

Exploring the relationship between entheseal changes and physical activity

Marco Milella; Francisca Alves Cardoso; Sandra Assis; Geneviève Perreard Lopreno; Nivien Speith

Analyses of entheseal changes (EC) in identified skeletal samples employ a common research strategy based on the comparison between occupations grouped on the basis of shared biomechanical and/or social characteristics. Results from this approach are often ambiguous, with some studies that point to differences in EC between occupational samples and others failing to provide evidence of behavioral effects on EC. Here we investigate patterns of EC among documented occupations by means of a multivariate analysis of robusticity scores in nine postcranial entheses from a large (N = 372) contemporary skeletal sample including specimens from one Italian and two Portuguese identified collections. Data on entheseal robusticity, analyzed by pooled sides as well by separated sides and levels of asymmetry, are converted in binary scores and then analyzed through nonlinear principal component analysis and hierarchical cluster analysis. Results of these analyses are then used for the classification of occupations. Differences between occupational classes are tested by MANOVA and pairwise Hotellings test. Results evidence three classes which separate occupations related to farming, physically demanding but generalized occupation, and physically undemanding occupations, with the more consistent differences between the first and the last classes. Our results are consistent with differences in biomechanical behavior between the occupations included in each class, and point to the physical and social specificity of farming activities. On the other hand, our study exemplifies the usefulness of alternative analytical protocols for the investigation of EC, and the value of research designs devoid of a priori assumptions for the test of biocultural hypotheses.


American Journal of Physical Anthropology | 2015

Exploring the relationship between entheseal changes and physical activity: A multivariate study: A Multivariate Study of Entheseal Robusticity

Marco Milella; Francisca Alves Cardoso; Sandra Assis; Geneviève Perreard Lopreno; Nivien Speith

Analyses of entheseal changes (EC) in identified skeletal samples employ a common research strategy based on the comparison between occupations grouped on the basis of shared biomechanical and/or social characteristics. Results from this approach are often ambiguous, with some studies that point to differences in EC between occupational samples and others failing to provide evidence of behavioral effects on EC. Here we investigate patterns of EC among documented occupations by means of a multivariate analysis of robusticity scores in nine postcranial entheses from a large (N = 372) contemporary skeletal sample including specimens from one Italian and two Portuguese identified collections. Data on entheseal robusticity, analyzed by pooled sides as well by separated sides and levels of asymmetry, are converted in binary scores and then analyzed through nonlinear principal component analysis and hierarchical cluster analysis. Results of these analyses are then used for the classification of occupations. Differences between occupational classes are tested by MANOVA and pairwise Hotellings test. Results evidence three classes which separate occupations related to farming, physically demanding but generalized occupation, and physically undemanding occupations, with the more consistent differences between the first and the last classes. Our results are consistent with differences in biomechanical behavior between the occupations included in each class, and point to the physical and social specificity of farming activities. On the other hand, our study exemplifies the usefulness of alternative analytical protocols for the investigation of EC, and the value of research designs devoid of a priori assumptions for the test of biocultural hypotheses.


International Journal of Osteoarchaeology | 2013

Categorization of Occupation in Documented Skeletal Collections: Its Relevance for the Interpretation of Activity-Related Osseous Changes

Geneviève Perreard Lopreno; Francisca Alves Cardoso; Sandra Assis; Marco Milella; Nivien Speith


American Journal of Physical Anthropology | 2012

The effect of age on entheseal changes at some fibrocartilaginous entheses

Charlotte Henderson; Valentina Mariotti; Doris Pany-Kucera; Geneviève Perreard Lopreno; Sébastien Villotte; C. Wilczak


American Journal of Physical Anthropology | 2012

Working activities or workload ? Categorization of occupation in identified skeletal series for the analysis of activity-related osseous changes

Geneviève Perreard Lopreno; Francisca Alves Cardoso; Sandra Assis; Marco Milella; Nivien Speith


Bulletin der Schweizerischen Gesellschaft für Anthropologie | 2012

Apprentissage et reproductibilité d’une méthode de cotation de l’aspect osseux des enthèses fibrocartilagineuses : résultats d’un test effectué lors du Workshop de la Société Suisse d’Anthropologie (Genève, 25 et 26 Juin 2010)

Sébastien Villotte; Geneviève Perreard Lopreno


Archive | 2007

Adaptation structurelle des os du membre supérieur et de la clavicule à l'activité

Geneviève Perreard Lopreno


Les collections ostéologiques humaines : gestion, valorisation et perspectives. Colloque | 2006

Les collections ostéologiques humaines du département d'Anthropologie et d'Écologie de l'université de Genève

Geneviève Perreard Lopreno


Archive | 2017

Esplanade de Saint-Antoine – Sépultures multiples : premiers apports anthropologiques et génétiques

Geneviève Perreard Lopreno; Irina Morozova; Gülfirde Akgül; Frank Rühli; Abigail Bouwman; Evelyne Broillet-Ramjoué

Collaboration


Dive into the Geneviève Perreard Lopreno's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge