School of Chemistry and Forensic Science, Division of Natural Sciences, University of Kent, Canterbury, Kent CT2 7NR, UK; Department of Human Biology, Faculty of Health Sciences, University of Cape Town, Cape Town, WC, South Africa.
Department of Electrical Engineering, Faculty of Engineering & the Built Environment, Cape Town, WC, South Africa.
Forensic Sci Int. 2023 Apr;345:111616. doi: 10.1016/j.forsciint.2023.111616. Epub 2023 Feb 27.
Determining the post-mortem interval (PMI) is often a critical goal in forensic casework. Consequently, the discipline of forensic taphonomy has involved considerable research efforts towards achieving this goal, with substantial strides made in the past 40 years. Importantly, quantification of decompositional data (and the models derived from them) and standardisation in experimental protocols are being increasingly recognised as key components of this drive. However, despite the discipline's best efforts, significant challenges remain. Still lacking are standardisation of many core components of experimental design, forensic realism in experimental design, true quantitative measures of the progression of decay, and high-resolution data. Without these critical elements, large-scale, synthesised multi-biogeographically representative datasets - necessary for building comprehensive models of decay to precisely estimate PMI - remain elusive. To address these limitations, we propose the automation of taphonomic data collection. We present the world's first reported fully automated, remotely operable forensic taphonomic data collection system, inclusive of technical design details. Through laboratory testing and field deployments, the apparatus substantially reduced the cost of actualistic (field-based) forensic taphonomic data collection, improved data resolution, and provided for more forensically realistic experimental deployments and simultaneous multi-biogeographic experiments. We argue that this device represents a quantum leap in experimental methodology in this field, paving the way for the next generation of forensic taphonomic research and, we hope, attainment of the elusive goal of precise estimation of PMI.
确定死后间隔时间(PMI)通常是法医工作中的关键目标。因此,法医埋藏学领域投入了相当多的研究努力来实现这一目标,在过去的 40 年中取得了重大进展。重要的是,对分解数据(以及从中得出的模型)的量化和实验方案的标准化越来越被认为是这一努力的关键组成部分。然而,尽管该学科做出了最大的努力,仍然存在重大挑战。实验设计的许多核心组件仍然缺乏标准化,实验设计中的法医真实性,对腐烂进展的真正定量衡量以及高分辨率数据。如果没有这些关键要素,就无法获得大规模的、综合的多生物地理代表性数据集——这些数据集对于构建全面的腐烂模型以准确估计 PMI 是必要的。为了解决这些限制,我们提出了自动收集埋藏学数据。我们提出了世界上第一个报告的全自动、远程操作的法医埋藏学数据收集系统,包括技术设计细节。通过实验室测试和现场部署,该设备大大降低了实际(基于现场)法医埋藏学数据收集的成本,提高了数据分辨率,并提供了更具法医真实性的实验部署和同时进行的多生物地理实验。我们认为,该设备代表了该领域实验方法学的重大飞跃,为下一代法医埋藏学研究铺平了道路,我们希望能够实现准确估计 PMI 的难以捉摸的目标。