Literature DB >> 19586965

FORDISC and the determination of ancestry from cranial measurements.

Marina Elliott1, Mark Collard.   

Abstract

Determining the ancestry of unidentified human remains is a major task for bioarchaeologists and forensic anthropologists. Here, we report an assessment of the computer program that has become the main tool for accomplishing this task. Called Fordisc, the program determines ancestry through discriminant function analysis of cranial measurements. We evaluated the utility of Fordisc with 200 specimens of known ancestry. We ran the analyses with and without the test specimen's source population included in the program's reference sample, and with and without specifying the sex of the test specimen. We also controlled for the possibility that the number of variables employed affects the program's ability to attribute ancestry. The results of the analyses suggest that Fordisc's utility in research and medico-legal contexts is limited. Fordisc will only return a correct ancestry attribution when an unidentified specimen is more or less complete, and belongs to one of the populations represented in the program's reference samples. Even then Fordisc can be expected to classify no more than 1 per cent of specimens with confidence.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  2009        PMID: 19586965      PMCID: PMC2827999          DOI: 10.1098/rsbl.2009.0462

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Biol Lett        ISSN: 1744-9561            Impact factor:   3.703


  4 in total

1.  Howells' craniometric data on the Internet.

Authors:  W W Howells
Journal:  Am J Phys Anthropol       Date:  1996-11       Impact factor: 2.868

2.  Human cranial anatomy and the differential preservation of population history and climate signatures.

Authors:  Katerina Harvati; Timothy D Weaver
Journal:  Anat Rec A Discov Mol Cell Evol Biol       Date:  2006-12

3.  Brief communication: human cranial variation fits iterative founder effect model with African origin.

Authors:  Noreen von Cramon-Taubadel; Stephen J Lycett
Journal:  Am J Phys Anthropol       Date:  2008-05       Impact factor: 2.868

4.  Understanding race and human variation: why forensic anthropologists are good at identifying race.

Authors:  Stephen Ousley; Richard Jantz; Donna Freid
Journal:  Am J Phys Anthropol       Date:  2009-05       Impact factor: 2.868

  4 in total
  3 in total

1.  Using CRANID to test the population affinity of known crania.

Authors:  Lauren Kallenberger; Varsha Pilbrow
Journal:  J Anat       Date:  2012-08-27       Impact factor: 2.610

2.  Cranial reconstruction evaluation - comparison of European statistical shape model performance on Chinese dataset.

Authors:  Marc Anton Fuessinger; Marc Christian Metzger; Rene Rothweiler; Leonard Simon Brandenburg; Stefan Schlager
Journal:  Bone Rep       Date:  2022-08-13

3.  "The dead shall be raised": Multidisciplinary analysis of human skeletons reveals complexity in 19th century immigrant socioeconomic history and identity in New Haven, Connecticut.

Authors:  Gary P Aronsen; Lars Fehren-Schmitz; John Krigbaum; George D Kamenov; Gerald J Conlogue; Christina Warinner; Andrew T Ozga; Krithivasan Sankaranarayanan; Anthony Griego; Daniel W DeLuca; Howard T Eckels; Romuald K Byczkiewicz; Tania Grgurich; Natalie A Pelletier; Sarah A Brownlee; Ana Marichal; Kylie Williamson; Yukiko Tonoike; Nicholas F Bellantoni
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2019-09-09       Impact factor: 3.240

  3 in total

北京卡尤迪生物科技股份有限公司 © 2022-2023.