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Root Morphology and Anatomical Patterns in Forensic Dental Identification: A Comparison of Computer-Aided Identification with Traditional Forensic Dental Identification

NCJ Number
232883
Journal
Journal of Forensic Sciences Volume: 55 Issue: 6 Pages: 1499-1503
Author(s)
Dirk T. van der Meer, D.M.D.; Paula C. Brumit, D.D.S.; Bruce A. Schrader, D.D.S.; Stephen B. Dove, D.D.S., M.S.; David R. Senn, D.D.S.
Date Published
November 2010
Length
5 pages
Annotation
An online forensic dental identification exercise was conducted involving 24 antemortem-postmortem (AM-PM) dental radiograph pairs from actual forensic identification cases.
Abstract
Images had been digitally cropped to remove coronal tooth structure and dental restorations. Volunteer forensic odontologists were passively recruited to compare the AM-PM dental radiographs online and conclude identification status using the guidelines for identification from the American Board of Forensic Odontology. The mean accuracy rate for identification was 86.0 percent (standard deviation 9.2 percent). The same radiograph pairs were compared using a digital imaging software algorithm, which generated a normalized coefficient of similarity for each pair. Twenty of the radiograph pairs generated a mean accuracy of 85.0 percent. Four of the pairs could not be used to generate a coefficient of similarity. Receiver operator curve and area under the curve statistical analysis confirmed good discrimination abilities of both methods (online exercise equals 0.978; UT-ID index equals 0.923) and Spearman's rank correlation coefficient analysis (0.683) indicated good correlation between the results of both methods. Computer-aided dental identification allows for an objective comparison of AM-PM radiographs and can be a useful tool to support a forensic dental identification conclusion. (Published Abstract)