I said
"assuming" that class 3 skulls frequently have less malar development. Which is generally what is observed, indeed I thought it was presumed typical of class 3. I certainly can't recall seeing many class 3s with strong cheekbones, myself. But lots and lots of flat cheekbones. So at the moment I am going to make that assumption...
The study cannot claim that their results ("malar prominence in class 3 males") are continued/magnified into adulthood unless there is a decent paper showing that class 3 adult males have prominent malar bones. Is there such a paper? I'd be interested if there were we tend to see the exact opposite. Otherwise I don't see how they can make this conclusion...it makes no sense to me
Bone growth isn't done at 18 for a lot of males. For women, yes, but for guys I think a lot have a little more to go especially in the regions affected by testosterone (e.g. chin point, bits of the jaw, brow ridge, malar bones...). Which could be why we get the result that we do in this study and why for a fair number of guys their class 3, although present from a younger age, gets a lot worse between 14 and 21.
I consider the most interesting part of the study to be the fact that 12-18 year old class 3 males in this sample
don't seem to show the typical malar hypoplasia that one usually sees in class 3s. And if it was my study I would probably conclude it's something to do with testosterone, given that it seems that in class 3 men, malar prominence is normal (or even larger than normal) at 12-18 but often hypoplasic in adulthood, but in women you don't get that effect. Totally willing to be wrong if there is a study showing that this isn't statistically the case and that class 3s typically don't have malar hypoplasia/have hyperplasia instead. But doesn't seem to be the case from what I've observed...
Do you agree that malar hypoplasia is typical/common for class 3s? Or is this statistically untrue? I'm just going on observations, haven't done any reading so if you have than I defer to that.