New method for estimation of adult skeletal age at death from the morphology of the auricular surface of the ilium

A new method for estimating skeletal age at death from the morphology of the auricular surface of the ilium is presented. It uses a multiple regression analysis with dummy variables, and is based on the examination of 700 modern Japanese skeletal remains with age records. The observer using this met...

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Veröffentlicht in:American journal of physical anthropology 2005-10, Vol.128 (2), p.324-339
Hauptverfasser: Igarashi, Yuriko, Uesu, Kagumi, Wakebe, Tetsuaki, Kanazawa, Eisaku
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container_issue 2
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container_title American journal of physical anthropology
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creator Igarashi, Yuriko
Uesu, Kagumi
Wakebe, Tetsuaki
Kanazawa, Eisaku
description A new method for estimating skeletal age at death from the morphology of the auricular surface of the ilium is presented. It uses a multiple regression analysis with dummy variables, and is based on the examination of 700 modern Japanese skeletal remains with age records. The observer using this method needs only to check for the presence or absence of nine (for a male) or seven (for a female) features on the auricular surface and to select the parameter estimates of each feature, calculated by multiple regression analysis with dummy variables. The observer can obtain an estimated age from the sum of parameter estimates. It is shown that a fine granular texture of the auricular surface is typical of younger individuals, whereas a heavily porous texture is characteristic of older individuals, and that both of these features are very useful for estimating age. Our method is shown here to be more accurate than other methods, especially in the older age ranges. Since the auricular surface allows more expedient observations than other parts of the skeleton, this new method can be expected to improve the overall accuracy of estimating skeletal age at death. Am J Phys Anthropol, 2005. © 2005 Wiley‐Liss, Inc.
doi_str_mv 10.1002/ajpa.20081
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source MEDLINE; Wiley Online Library Journals Frontfile Complete
subjects Adolescent
Adult
Age Determination by Skeleton
Aged
Aged, 80 and over
binary classification
Child
dummy variables
Female
Forensic Anthropology
Humans
Ilium - pathology
Male
Middle Aged
modern Japanese
multiple regression analysis
Reproducibility of Results
title New method for estimation of adult skeletal age at death from the morphology of the auricular surface of the ilium
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