| Literature DB >> 34642444 |
Ioanna Anastopoulou1, Fotios Alexandros Karakostis2, Katerina Harvati3,4, Konstantinos Moraitis5.
Abstract
Commingled remains describes the situation of intermixed skeletal elements, an extremely common occurrence in contemporary forensic cases, archaeological mass graves, as well as fossil hominin assemblages. Given that reliable identification is typically impossible for commingled contexts, a plethora of previous studies has focused on the development of refined methods for reassociating the bones of each individual skeleton. Here, a novel virtual approach for quantifying the degree of three-dimensional shape compatibility between two adjoining bone articular surfaces is put forth. Additionally, the integrability of this method with traditional osteometric techniques is evaluated. We focus on the paradigm of the hip joint, whose articulating bone elements (the femur and the innominate bone) are crucial for reconstructing the biological profile of unidentified human remains. The results demonstrate that this new semi-automated methodology is highly accurate both for large commingled assemblages (such as those resulting from mass disasters or burials) as well as smaller-scale contexts (such as those resulting from secondary burials).Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34642444 PMCID: PMC8511056 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-021-99962-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1Correct sorting rates for a large-scale sample of 97 individuals. The methodology’s “1st indication” is considered to be the femur with the smallest shape difference (i.e., Manhattan distance; see Materials and Methods) to the examined acetabulum.
Blind tests results.
| Method | Blind test #1 | Blind test #2 | Blind test #3 |
|---|---|---|---|
| GM only | 10/10 | 9/10 | 9/10 |
| GM and metrics | 10/10 | 9/10 | 10/10 |
“GM only” signifies that the first indication of the present methodology was considered to be the match, while “GM and metrics” signifies that the first and second indication of the present methodology were supplementary examined metrically.
Figure 2Landmark placement. The landmarks of the acetabulum (A) are approximate mirrored counterparts of the landmarks of the femur (B-anterior view, C-posterior view) when the two articular surfaces adjoin. The landmark and semi-landmark descriptions are presented in Table 2.
Landmark and semi-landmark descriptions of the acetabulum (1–11) and the femur (1–11).
| Landmark/semi-landmark | Description |
|---|---|
| 1 | The most superiorly projecting point of the acetabular rim |
| 2 | The mid-point of the acetabular notch |
| 3 | The most anteriorly projecting point of the acetabular rim |
| 4 | The most posteriorly projecting point of the acetabular rim |
| 5* | The mid-point between landmarks 1 and 4 |
| 6* | The mid-point between landmarks 2 and 4 |
| 7* | The mid-point between landmarks 2 and 3 |
| 8* | The mid-point between landmarks 1 and 3 |
| 9 | The most superiorly projecting point of the acetabular fossa |
| 10 | The most posteriorly projecting point of the acetabular fossa |
| 11 | The most anteriorly projecting point of the acetabular fossa |
| 1 | The most projecting point of the femoral head rim, when viewed superiorly |
| 2 | The most projecting point of the femoral head rim, when viewed medially |
| 3 | The most projecting point of the femoral head rim, when viewed anteriorly |
| 4 | The most projecting point of the femoral head rim, when viewed posteriorly |
| 5* | The mid-point between landmarks 1 and 4 |
| 6* | The mid-point between landmarks 2 and 4 |
| 7* | The mid-point between landmarks 2 and 3 |
| 8* | The mid-point between landmarks 1 and 3 |
| 9 | The most superiorly projecting point of the fovea capitis |
| 10 | The most posteriorly projecting point of the fovea capitis |
| 11 | The most anteriorly projecting point of the fovea capitis |
The symbol (*) refers to semi-landmarks.