Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
6938750 | Pattern Recognition | 2018 | 38 Pages |
Abstract
Comparative radiography is a forensic identification technique traditionally involving the manual comparison of ante-mortem and post-mortem radiographs, thus being time consuming and error prone. The main objective is to propose and validate a computer-aided comparative radiography paradigm based on the 3D bone scan-2D radiograph superimposition process of any bone or cavity. The proposal follows an image registration methodology to automatically search for the ante-mortem radiograph acquisition parameters from the forensic object's silhouette considering occlusions. The underlying optimization problem is complex since a close initialization cannot be assumed and the image intensities are not reliable or not captured. Several experiments were performed to validate the method. First, we study its accuracy and robustness with synthetic images of clavicles, patellae and frontal sinuses. Second, we study how optimization performance and both variability and differences in the segmentation performed by human operators affect the identification using synthetic and real images of frontal sinuses.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Computer Science
Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition
Authors
Oscar Gómez, Oscar Ibáñez, Andrea Valsecchi, Oscar Cordón, Tzipi Kahana,