Journal article

Aging adult skull vaults by applying the concept of fractal geometry to high-resolution computed tomography images


Authors listObert, Martin; Seyfried, Maren; Schumacher, Falk; Krombach, Gabriele A.; Verhoff, Marcel A.

Publication year2014

Pages24-31

JournalForensic Science International

Volume number242

ISSN0379-0738

eISSN1872-6283

DOI Linkhttps://doi.org/10.1016/j.forsciint.2014.06.018

PublisherElsevier


Abstract

Introduction: Aging human remains is a critical issue in anthropology and forensic medicine, and the search for accurate, new age-estimation methods is ongoing. In our study, we, therefore, explored a new approach to investigate a possible correlation between age-at-death (aad) and geometric irregularities in the bone structure of human skull caps. We applied the concept of fractal geometry and fractal dimension D analysis to describe heterogeneity within the bone structure.

Methods: A high-resolution flat-panel computed tomography scanner (eXplore Locus Ultra) was used to obtain 229,500 images from 221 male and 120 female (total 341) European human skulls. Automated image analysis software was developed to evaluate the fractal dimension D, using the mass radius method. The frontal and the occipital portions of the skull caps of adult females and males were investigated separately. The age dependence of the fractal dimension D was studied by correlation analysis, and the prediction accuracy of age-at-death (aad) estimates for individual observations was calculated.

Results: D values for human skull caps scatter strongly as a function of age. We found sex-dependent correlation coefficients (CC) between D and age for adults (females CC = -0.67; males CC = -0.05). Prediction errors for aad estimates for individual observations were in the range of +/- 18 years at a 75% confidence interval.

Conclusions: The detailed quantitative description of age-dependent irregularities in the bone microarchitecture of skull vaults through fractal dimension analysis does not, as we had hoped, enable a new aging method. Severe scattering of the data leads to an estimation error that is too great for this method to be of practical relevance in aad estimates. Thus, we disclosed an interesting sex difference. (C) 2014 Elsevier Ireland Ltd. All rights reserved.




Citation Styles

Harvard Citation styleObert, M., Seyfried, M., Schumacher, F., Krombach, G. and Verhoff, M. (2014) Aging adult skull vaults by applying the concept of fractal geometry to high-resolution computed tomography images, Forensic Science International, 242, pp. 24-31. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.forsciint.2014.06.018

APA Citation styleObert, M., Seyfried, M., Schumacher, F., Krombach, G., & Verhoff, M. (2014). Aging adult skull vaults by applying the concept of fractal geometry to high-resolution computed tomography images. Forensic Science International. 242, 24-31. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.forsciint.2014.06.018



Keywords


Age-at-deathDEATHdimensionFEMURForensic anthropology population dataHigh-resolution flat-panel computed tomographySKELETAL AGE

Last updated on 2025-21-05 at 18:36