Perspective distortion tolerances and skull-face registration in craniofacial superimposition: an analytical review

Craniofacial superimposition requires the photographic registration of a skull at transparency to a photograph of an antemortem (AM) face so that anatomical concordance between the two can be assessed. When the camera vantage point of the AM photograph is exactly replicated for skull photography, th...

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Veröffentlicht in:International journal of legal medicine 2023-11, Vol.137 (6), p.1767-1776
Hauptverfasser: Healy, Sean S., Stephan, Carl N.
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Stephan, Carl N.
description Craniofacial superimposition requires the photographic registration of a skull at transparency to a photograph of an antemortem (AM) face so that anatomical concordance between the two can be assessed. When the camera vantage point of the AM photograph is exactly replicated for skull photography, the superimposition is a relatively straightforward process as the images are precisely comparable without complicating factors. In practice, however, focus distances are almost never exactly replicated because the focus distance for AM face photography is rarely known. Embedded differences in perspective, thereby, drive the images away from correspondence, raising questions as to how much difference can be tolerated and what image registration methods should be used. Recently, a ± 1% mismatch in facial height has been posited as an acceptable upper tolerance limit to differential perspective, but this proposition is speculative and has not yet been confirmed by tests on real-life images. In addition, the impact of image registration methods, though critically relevant, has received comparatively little consideration. This paper provides the first in-depth review of these intertwined perspective/registration matters and objective evaluation of tolerances by using real 2D photographic images and synthetic images generated from 3D CT data to demonstrate perspective impact on skull morphology. Taken together, the review confirms a ≤ 1% perspective difference in facial height to be a suitable criterion for craniofacial superimposition (at least as a starting point for method improvement), and that image registration should be point-based using a sellion/nasion combination to minimize anatomical misalignment in the principal region-of-interest (the mid-face).
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subjects Face - anatomy & histology
Face - diagnostic imaging
Forensic Anthropology - methods
Forensic Medicine
Humans
Image Processing, Computer-Assisted - methods
Image registration
Imaging, Three-Dimensional
Medical Law
Medicine
Medicine & Public Health
Misalignment
Photography
Registration
Review
Skull
Skull - anatomy & histology
Skull - diagnostic imaging
Synthetic data
Tolerances
Tomography, X-Ray Computed
title Perspective distortion tolerances and skull-face registration in craniofacial superimposition: an analytical review
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