The potential of statistical shape modelling for geometric morphometric analysis of human teeth in archaeological research

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Abstract

This paper introduces statistical shape modelling (SSM) for use in osteoarchaeology research. SSM is a full field, multi-material analytical technique, and is presented as a supplementary geometric morphometric (GM) tool. Lower mandibular canines from two archaeological populations and one modern population were sampled, digitised using micro-CT, aligned, registered to a baseline and statistically modelled using principal component analysis (PCA). Sample material properties were incorporated as a binary enamel/dentin parameter. Results were assessed qualitatively and quantitatively using anatomical landmarks. Finally, the technique’s application was demonstrated for inter-sample comparison through analysis of the principal component (PC) weights. It was found that SSM could provide high detail qualitative and quantitative insight with respect to archaeological inter- and intra-sample variability. This technique has value for archaeological, biomechanical and forensic applications including identification, finite element analysis (FEA) and reconstruction from partial datasets.

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Woods, C., Fernee, C., Browne, M., Zakrzewski, S., & Dickinson, A. (2017). The potential of statistical shape modelling for geometric morphometric analysis of human teeth in archaeological research. PLoS ONE, 12(12). https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0186754

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