Robinson Meredith Stacy, Bidmos Mubarak Ariyo
School of Anatomical Sciences, Faculty of Health Sciences, University of Witwatersrand, 7 York Road, Parktown 2193, Johannesburg, South Africa.
Forensic Sci Int. 2009 Apr 15;186(1-3):86.e1-5. doi: 10.1016/j.forsciint.2009.01.003. Epub 2009 Feb 11.
Sex determination plays a crucial role in the identification of human remains as it narrows the possibility for identification by 50%. The purpose of this study is to test the validity of five discriminant function equations, with accuracies of 80% and higher, that have been derived by Steyn and Işcan [M. Steyn, M.Y. Işcan, Sexual dimorphism in the crania and mandibles of South African Whites, Forensic Sci. Int. 98 (1998) 9-16; M. Steyn, M.Y. Işcan, Osteometric variation in the humerus: sexual dimorphism in South Africans, Forensic Sci. Int. 106 (1999) 77-85] for the skull and humerus of South Africans of European Descent (SAED). These equations were tested on different regional populations of SAED within South Africa. While the validity of some of the discriminant functions has been assessed by the authors who derived them, no other previous independent study has been carried out to assess the reliability of these equations. In addition, these equations have not been tested on skeletons located outside the Gauteng province. The study sample consisted of 230 skulls and 264 humeri of SAED obtained from four South African skeletal collections: Raymond A. Dart Collection of Human Skeletons (Johannesburg); Pretoria Bone Collection; Cape Town Skeletal Collection; and the Osteology Archive Student Collection (Stellenbosch). A total of 14 measurements (12 cranial and 2 humeral) were taken on these skeletal elements. The observed accuracies from the present study (72.0-95.5%), with the exception of one sample's accuracy, compared well with the original classification rates (80.2-92.5%) for most of the functions thereby confirming the validity of the discriminant function equations for sex determination for the skull and humerus of SAED, for SAED in all regions of South Africa.
性别鉴定在人类遗骸识别中起着至关重要的作用,因为它将识别可能性降低了50%。本研究的目的是检验Steyn和Işcan [M. Steyn, M.Y. Işcan, Sexual dimorphism in the crania and mandibles of South African Whites, Forensic Sci. Int. 98 (1998) 9 - 16; M. Steyn, M.Y. Işcan, Osteometric variation in the humerus: sexual dimorphism in South Africans, Forensic Sci. Int. 106 (1999) 77 - 85] 推导得出的五个判别函数方程的有效性,这些方程在确定南非欧洲裔(SAED)人群的颅骨和肱骨性别方面准确率达到80%及以上。这些方程在南非境内不同地区的SAED人群中进行了测试。虽然推导这些判别函数的作者已经评估了其中一些函数的有效性,但此前没有其他独立研究对这些方程的可靠性进行评估。此外,这些方程尚未在豪登省以外地区的骨骼上进行测试。研究样本包括从四个南非骨骼收藏中获取的230个SAED颅骨和264个SAED肱骨:雷蒙德·A·达特人类骨骼收藏(约翰内斯堡);比勒陀利亚骨骼收藏;开普敦骨骼收藏;以及骨科学档案学生收藏(斯泰伦博斯)。对这些骨骼元素进行了总共14项测量(12项颅骨测量和2项肱骨测量)。本研究观察到的准确率(72.0 - 95.5%),除了一个样本的准确率外,与大多数函数的原始分类率(80.2 - 92.5%)相比情况良好,从而证实了判别函数方程在确定南非所有地区SAED人群的颅骨和肱骨性别方面的有效性。