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Testing Discriminant Functions for Sex Determination from Deciduous Teeth*,†
Authors:Hugo F. V. Cardoso Ph.D.
Affiliation:1. Departamento de Zoologia e Antropologia, Museu Nacional de História Natural & Centro de Biologia Ambiental, Lisboa, Portugal.;2. Faculdade de Medicina, Universidade do Porto, Porto, Portugal.
Abstract:
Abstract: Three studies have proposed discriminant functions for sex determination from deciduous tooth crown dimensions, and this study tests the existing functions on a sample of 46 Portuguese immature skeletons of known sex, aged from birth to 10 years. Deciduous teeth were measured in their mesiodistal and faciolingual crown dimensions, and percentage of correct allocation accuracy in determining sex using each specific function was determined. Discriminant functions were also calculated from data collected for this study and tested using cross‐validation. Results show poor overall accuracy (33.3–75%) and poor cross‐validation (46.2–60.0%). This is related to low sexual dimorphism in deciduous tooth crown size, as well as differences in degree of sexual dimorphism and in overall tooth size between different samples. For these reasons, deciduous crown size does not seem to show significant forensic value as discriminator of sex, particularly when methods developed on one population are applied to individuals of another population.
Keywords:forensic science  forensic anthropology  human identification  sex determination  deciduous dentition  odontometrics
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