Abstract

BackgroundThe application of three-dimensional scan models offers a useful resource for studying craniofacial variation. The complex mathematical analysis for facial point acquisition in three-dimensional models has made many craniofacial assessments laborious.MethodThis study investigates three-dimensional (3D) soft-tissue craniofacial variation, with relation to ethnicity, sex and age variables in British and Irish white Europeans. This utilizes a geometric morphometric approach on a subsampled dataset comprising 292 scans, taken from a Liverpool-York Head Model database. Shape variation and analysis of each variable are tested using 20 anchor anatomical landmarks and 480 sliding semi-landmarks.ResultsSignificant ethnicity, sex, and age differences are observed for measurement covering major aspects of the craniofacial shape. The ethnicity shows subtle significant differences compared to sex and age; even though it presents the lowest classification accuracy. The magnitude of dimorphism in sex is revealed in the facial, nasal and crania measurement. Significant shape differences are also seen at each age group, with some distinct dimorphic features present in the age groups.ConclusionsThe patterns of shape variation show that white British individuals have a more rounded head shape, whereas white Irish individuals have a narrower head shape. White British persons also demonstrate higher classification accuracy. Regarding sex patterns, males are relatively larger than females, especially in the mouth and nasal regions. Females presented with higher classification accuracy than males. The differences in the chin, mouth, nose, crania, and forehead emerge from different growth rates between the groups. Classification accuracy is best for children and senior adult age groups.

Highlights

  • Morphometrics is the study of shape variation and its covariation with other variables [1,2]

  • The magnitude of dimorphism in sex is revealed in the facial, nasal and crania measurement

  • Males are relatively larger than females, especially in the mouth and nasal regions

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Summary

Introduction

Morphometrics is the study of shape variation and its covariation with other variables [1,2]. According to Dean et al [3], morphometrics was traditionally the application of multivariate statistical analyses to a set of quantitative variables such as length, width, height and, angle. The latest approach to shape analyses is geometric morphometric. This is directly based on the digitized x,y,z-coordinate positions of landmarks, points representing the spatial positions of putatively homologous structures in two- or three-dimensions; whereas conventional morphometric studies utilize distances as variables [1,2,5]. The application of three-dimensional scan models offers a useful resource for studying craniofacial variation. The complex mathematical analysis for facial point acquisition in threedimensional models has made many craniofacial assessments laborious

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