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Clinically Detectable Dental Identifiers Observed in Intra‐oral Photographs and Extra‐oral Radiographs,Validated for Human Identification Purposes
Authors:Nikolaos Angelakopoulos M.Sc.  Ademir Franco M.Sc.  Guy Willems Ph.D.  Steffen Fieuws Ph.D.  Patrick Thevissen Ph.D.
Affiliation:1. Department of Oral Health Sciences, Forensic Dentistry, KU Leuven & Dentistry, University Hospitals Leuven, Leuven, Belgium;2. Stomatology, Department of Dentistry, School of Life Sciences, Pontifícia Universidade Católica do Paraná, Prado Velho, Curitiba, Brazil;3. Interuniversity Institute for Biostatistics and Statistical Bioinformatics, KU Leuven – University of Leuven & Universiteit Hasselt, Leuven, Belgium
Abstract:Screening the prevalence and pattern of dental identifiers contributes toward the process of human identification. This research investigated the uniqueness of clinical dental identifiers in photographs and radiographs. Panoramic and lateral cephalometric radiographs and five intra‐oral photographs of 1727 subjects were used. In a target set, two observers examined different subjects. In a subset, both observers examined the same subjects (source set). The distance between source and target subjects was quantified for each identifier. The percentage of subjects in the target set being at least as close as the correct subject was assessed. The number of molars (34.6%), missing teeth (42%), and displaced teeth (59.9%) were the most unique identifiers in photographs and panoramic and lateral cephalometric radiographs, respectively. The pattern of rotated teeth (14.9%) was the most unique in photographs, while displaced teeth was in panoramic (37.6%) and lateral cephalometric (54.8%) radiographs. Morphological identifiers were the most unique, highlighting their importance for human identifications.
Keywords:forensic science  forensic dentistry  identifiers  uniqueness  human identification  morphology
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