Sex and ancestry related differences between two Central European populations determined using exocranial meshes
Language English Country Ireland Media print-electronic
Document type Journal Article
PubMed
30879959
DOI
10.1016/j.forsciint.2019.02.034
PII: S0379-0738(19)30065-9
Knihovny.cz E-resources
- Keywords
- Exocranium, Forensic science, Population affinity, Sex estimation, Skull, Virtual anthropology,
- MeSH
- Principal Component Analysis MeSH
- White People MeSH
- Adult MeSH
- Skull diagnostic imaging MeSH
- Middle Aged MeSH
- Humans MeSH
- Adolescent MeSH
- Young Adult MeSH
- Reproducibility of Results MeSH
- Aged MeSH
- Forensic Anthropology MeSH
- Machine Learning MeSH
- Support Vector Machine MeSH
- Sex Determination by Skeleton methods MeSH
- Imaging, Three-Dimensional MeSH
- Check Tag
- Adult MeSH
- Middle Aged MeSH
- Humans MeSH
- Adolescent MeSH
- Young Adult MeSH
- Male MeSH
- Aged MeSH
- Female MeSH
- Publication type
- Journal Article MeSH
- Geographicals
- Czech Republic MeSH
- France MeSH
Assessing sex and population affinity is an important part of the process of biologically identifying unknown human remains, and the skull is usually one of the best structures for assessing both these components of the biological profile. Population affinity is known to be a hugely important variable when estimating sex because the manifestation of sexually dimorphic traits, body size or social and behavioural habits differs across populations. Therefore, for forensic purposes, the estimation of ancestry is a necessary step in the identification of bone remains. The present study improves on the results of a previously developed virtual method using the exocranial surface for sex estimation and assessing population affinity. The ability to assess these components of the biological profile was successfully tested on 208 individuals from two recent European populations. The original classifier was based on geometric morphometric analyses (CPD-DCA, PCA, SVM) and was able to assess the sex of individuals belonging to one French population with an accuracy exceeding 90 % Musilová et al. [1]. To improve the reliability of the method, the Czech population sample was added to the dataset, yielding the highest accuracy of 96.2 %; using the combined dataset, the reliability of the method was 91.8 %. Secondly, we used the same method utilizing inter-population differences to classify individuals based on the shape of the skull. The greatest accuracy rate was 92.8 %, which makes our method a promising tool for sex estimation and assessing population affinity.
References provided by Crossref.org
Age-related differences in cranial sexual dimorphism in contemporary Europe