Sex estimation using the proximal end of the femur on a modern Chilean sample

Sex estimation is fundamental for the identification of skeletonized human remains in forensic contexts. The methods most often used are based on pelvis and skull morphology evaluation. When these elements are not available due to poor preservation, other bone elements, such as the femur, can be use...

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Main Authors: David Carvallo, Rodrigo Retamal
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2020-12-01
Series:Forensic Science International: Reports
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2665910720300232
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spelling doaj-27fd41b5b3734d98a3547bbaa2455f7f2020-11-25T02:47:09ZengElsevierForensic Science International: Reports2665-91072020-12-012100077Sex estimation using the proximal end of the femur on a modern Chilean sampleDavid Carvallo0Rodrigo Retamal1Independent researcher; Corresponding author.Department of Anthropology, University of Chile. Ignacio Carrera Pinto 1045, Santiago, ChileSex estimation is fundamental for the identification of skeletonized human remains in forensic contexts. The methods most often used are based on pelvis and skull morphology evaluation. When these elements are not available due to poor preservation, other bone elements, such as the femur, can be used given its good preservation and marked sexual dimorphism. Particularly, the proximal end of the femur is the most dimorphic region of this bone, so its evaluation is especially useful for sex estimation. A set of new sex estimation models were elaborated utilizing 8 metric variables from the proximal end of the femur in a modern Chilean sample of 270 individuals (200 individuals for training, 70 individuals for validation) from the Santiago Modern Osteological Collection. Sex estimation models were calculated using logistic regression. Results showed that the models based on the femoral neck measurements are the best sex estimators, with up to 92.9% (univariable models) and 95.7% (multivariable models) of overall accuracy and low sex bias. The models proposed here are the most accurate reported to date for modern Chilean population and can contribute toward the identification of human remains in cases of Human Rights violations committed during the Civil-Military Dictatorship in Chile (1973–1990).http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2665910720300232Sex estimationProximal femurChileForensic anthropology population data
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author David Carvallo
Rodrigo Retamal
spellingShingle David Carvallo
Rodrigo Retamal
Sex estimation using the proximal end of the femur on a modern Chilean sample
Forensic Science International: Reports
Sex estimation
Proximal femur
Chile
Forensic anthropology population data
author_facet David Carvallo
Rodrigo Retamal
author_sort David Carvallo
title Sex estimation using the proximal end of the femur on a modern Chilean sample
title_short Sex estimation using the proximal end of the femur on a modern Chilean sample
title_full Sex estimation using the proximal end of the femur on a modern Chilean sample
title_fullStr Sex estimation using the proximal end of the femur on a modern Chilean sample
title_full_unstemmed Sex estimation using the proximal end of the femur on a modern Chilean sample
title_sort sex estimation using the proximal end of the femur on a modern chilean sample
publisher Elsevier
series Forensic Science International: Reports
issn 2665-9107
publishDate 2020-12-01
description Sex estimation is fundamental for the identification of skeletonized human remains in forensic contexts. The methods most often used are based on pelvis and skull morphology evaluation. When these elements are not available due to poor preservation, other bone elements, such as the femur, can be used given its good preservation and marked sexual dimorphism. Particularly, the proximal end of the femur is the most dimorphic region of this bone, so its evaluation is especially useful for sex estimation. A set of new sex estimation models were elaborated utilizing 8 metric variables from the proximal end of the femur in a modern Chilean sample of 270 individuals (200 individuals for training, 70 individuals for validation) from the Santiago Modern Osteological Collection. Sex estimation models were calculated using logistic regression. Results showed that the models based on the femoral neck measurements are the best sex estimators, with up to 92.9% (univariable models) and 95.7% (multivariable models) of overall accuracy and low sex bias. The models proposed here are the most accurate reported to date for modern Chilean population and can contribute toward the identification of human remains in cases of Human Rights violations committed during the Civil-Military Dictatorship in Chile (1973–1990).
topic Sex estimation
Proximal femur
Chile
Forensic anthropology population data
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2665910720300232
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