Computer-aided craniofacial superimposition validation study: the identification of the leaders and participants of the Polish-Lithuanian January Uprising (1863–1864)

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Martos, Rubén
Guerra, Rosario
Navarro, Fernando
Peruch, Michela
Neuwirth, Kevin
Valsecchi, Andrea
Jankauskas, Rimantas

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Martos, R., Guerra, R., Navarro, F. et al. Computer-aided craniofacial superimposition validation study: the identification of the leaders and participants of the Polish-Lithuanian January Uprising (1863–1864). Int J Legal Med 138, 107–121 (2024). https://doi.org/10.1007/s00414-022-02929-4

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Abstract

[Abstract]: In 2017, a series of human remains corresponding to the executed leaders of the “January Uprising” of 1863–1864 were uncovered at the Upper Castle of Vilnius (Lithuania). During the archeological excavations, 14 inhumation pits with the human remains of 21 individuals were found at the site. The subsequent identification process was carried out, including the analysis and cross-comparison of post-mortem data obtained in situ and in the lab with ante-mortem data obtained from historical archives. In parallel, three anthropologists with diverse backgrounds in craniofacial identification and two students without previous experience attempted to identify 11 of these 21 individuals using the craniofacial superimposition technique. To do this, the five participants had access to 18 3D scanned skulls and 14 photographs of 11 different candidates. The participants faced a cross-comparison problem involving 252 skull-face overlay scenarios. The methodology follows the main agreements of the European project MEPROCS and uses the software Skeleton-ID™. Based on MEPROCS standard, a final decision was provided within a scale, assigning a value in terms of strong, moderate, or limited support to the claim that the skull and the facial image belonged (or not) to the same person for each case. The problem of binary classification, positive/negative, with an identification rate for each participant was revealed. The results obtained in this study make the authors think that both the quality of the materials used and the previous experience of the analyst play a fundamental role when reaching conclusions using the CFS technique.

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The online version contains supplementary material available at https://doi.org/10.1007/s00414-022-02929-4. Data availability: All the data employed in this study could be shared under certaing conditions. To access primary data (facial photographs and 3D skull models) ask Dr. Rimantas Jankauskas. To access secondary data (landmarks, vectors and resulting SFOs), contact the corresponding author.

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Atribución 4.0 Internacional
Atribución 4.0 Internacional

Except where otherwise noted, this item's license is described as Atribución 4.0 Internacional