Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
96866 Forensic Science International 2011 8 Pages PDF
Abstract

Skin is a less than ideal medium for recording bitemark impressions, and assessing the causes and magnitude of distortion has long been a question in forensic odontology. Affine methods have been suggested as a mathematical means to attempt to quantify the deformation typically seen with a bitemark. Thirty-six bites were created on unembalmed human cadavers with a single dentition. Three mathematical affine methods were evaluated to determine if the distortion could be described mathematically and effectively removed. A measure of mismatch of a dentition to a bitemark was developed based on landmark measurements establishing a numerical basis for comparisons of dentitions to bitemarks. Results indicate high levels of distortion in the bitemarks not attributable to affine deformations or measurement error, suggesting that non-uniform anisotropic properties of skin mostly contribute to the distortion seen, thus concluding that bitemark distortion cannot be corrected by using affine transformations.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Chemistry Analytical Chemistry
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