Christensen Angi M
The University of Tennessee, Department of Anthropology, 250 South Stadium Hall, Knoxville, TN, USA.
J Forensic Sci. 2004 Jan;49(1):5-10.
Case studies of freefall injuries suggest that most falls from heights result in lower extremity, pelvic, and vertebral fractures. These injuries are largely a consequence of the fact that most falls are accidental with victims landing feet first. This study investigates whether human behavioral response affects body orientation at impact and whether the human body tends to align in a particular way as a result of physical laws. The investigation was undertaken by observing nine experimental falls of an anthropomorphic dummy from a height of 65 ft (9.8 m). In all nine falls, the dummy landed horizontally, suggesting that the human form has a tendency to align horizontally during freefall for falls greater than 50 ft (15.24 m). This has important implications for the potential use of injury patterns in the deduction of pre-fall circumstances, which are discussed here with respect to a case study of a fall victim.
自由落体损伤的案例研究表明,大多数从高处坠落会导致下肢、骨盆和脊椎骨折。这些损伤很大程度上是由于大多数坠落是意外发生的,受害者双脚先着地。本研究调查人类行为反应是否会影响撞击时的身体方位,以及人体是否会由于物理定律而倾向于以特定方式对齐。该调查是通过观察一个拟人化假人从65英尺(9.8米)高处进行的9次实验性坠落来进行的。在所有9次坠落中,假人均水平着地,这表明对于超过50英尺(15.24米)的坠落,人体在自由落体过程中倾向于水平对齐。这对于利用损伤模式推断坠落前情况的潜在用途具有重要意义,在此将结合一名坠落受害者的案例研究进行讨论。