当代西班牙人口的性别估计:颅骨和牙齿人体测量。

IF 0.7 4区 社会学 Q3 ANTHROPOLOGY Homo-Journal of Comparative Human Biology Pub Date : 2020-08-12 DOI:10.1127/homo/2020/1200
Joan Viciano, Anabel Amores-Ampuero
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引用次数: 3

摘要

在法医死亡调查和考古背景下,骨骼遗骸的性别估计是重建未知个体生物概况的重要步骤。然而,骨架往往是不完整的。当没有骨盆时,头骨被广泛认为是第二好的性别指标。然而,争论仍在继续,有证据表明颅后骨比头盖骨具有更大的歧视能力。本研究的目的是确定结合颅骨和牙齿测量进行性别估计的准确性和可靠性,并将其与分别使用颅骨和牙齿测量的方法进行比较,并提供证据,说明在骨盆不可用的情况下,结合颅骨和牙齿测量是否比单独使用颅后骨骼测量更有效。研究样本包括来自西班牙格拉纳达圣何塞公墓的70个人。采用logistic回归分析对30个颅测量值和44个牙测量值进行检验。这些数据表明,狗的神经颅和上颌测量相结合提供了关键维度,作为该样本中性别的重要预测因素。对于汇总的性别,总体正确的性别分配准确率在76.0%到92.3%之间。目前的研究表明,当使用计量数据时,没有证据表明颅骨测量比颅后骨骼测量更能估计性别。只有头盖骨和上颌犬科测量的结合才提供了与颅后骨骼相似的性别歧视能力。
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Sex estimation in a contemporary Spanish population: cranial and dental anthropometry.

Sex estimation of skeletal remains is an essential step in the reconstruction of the biological profile of unknown individuals in medico-legal death investigations and archaeological contexts. However, the skeletons are often incomplete. When the pelvis is absent, the skull is widely considered to be the second-best indicator of sex. However, debate persists, and there is evidence that postcranial bones have more discriminatory power than the cranium. The present study was undertaken to determine the accuracy and reliability of a combination of skull and dental measurements for sex estimation in comparison with the cranial and dental methods separately, and to provide evidence as to whether the combination of these cranial measurements is more effective than postcranial bones alone for estimating sex when the pelvis is not available. The study sample comprised 70 individuals from the San José cemetery in Granada (Spain). Thirty cranial measurements and 44 dental measurements were examined using logistic regression analyses. These data showed that the combination of neurocranial and maxillary canine measurements provide the key dimensions as significant predictors of sex in this sample. For the pooled sexes, the overall correct sex allocation accuracies ranged from 76.0% to 92.3%. The present study shows that when using metric data, there is no evidence that the skull measures are better than those of the postcranial bones to estimate the sex. Only the combination of skull and maxillary canine measures provide similar sex discriminatory power to those of the postcranial skeleton.

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