Forensic Anthropology: New Methodological and Theoretical Perspectives in Forensic Human Skeletal Identification and Methods
A special issue of Biology (ISSN 2079-7737). This special issue belongs to the section "Evolutionary Biology".
Deadline for manuscript submissions: closed (30 June 2022) | Viewed by 60421
Special Issue Editors
Interests: human skeletal remains; physical anthropology; forensic anthropology; management of museum human collections; ethics; human funerary behavior
Special Issue Information
Dear Colleagues,
Forensic anthropology is one the most important research branches of physical anthropology, a discipline dealing with the study of human variability in the past and present, of its link to macro- and microevolutionary evolutionary processes, and of its interactions with biological and cultural factors over time. A critical understanding of human evolution and biodiversity is essential in forensic anthropology. Indeed, modern human skeletal variability is the result of recent evolutionary processes which occurred around the Holocene transition, and is the result of a complex interaction between biological and cultural factors. Thus, the forensic analysis of anthropological remains must takes into account not only the impact/influence of human biological variability (e.g. sex, age, ancestry, population differences) but also that of cultural factors (e.g. funerary practices and rituals, interpersonal violence, healthcare) in order to best comprehend and analyze skeletal variability in modern populations. This approach may provide critical insights into the reconstruction of the biological profile, the identification of unknown human skeletal remains, as well as the reconstruction of forensically relevant events (e.g. taphonomic processes, depositional events). In parallel with this well-established evolutionary-focused perspective, forensic anthropology would benefit from the incorporation of novel methodological and theoretical approaches. Such modern methods could yield data of higher resolution or quality, may help the repeatability, and ultimately increase the scientific soundness and rigor of the assessments. New theoretical approaches that incorporate into the forensic practice social concepts of gender, life course stages, embodiment of health may open new crossing-cutting issues in the research applied to the forensic context in rapidly changing societies.
The majority of forensic anthropological research is aimed at the systematic study of skeletal remains for the purposes of assessing the biological profile (ancestry, sex, age at death, health condition, cause of death), the post mortem interval, and possibly the circumstances of death (injuries or other traumatic events) in forensic cases. In this context, the continuous test and application of new methods is essential to maximize the accuracy of collected data and the reliability of the assessments provided to the court. Large and well-documented human skeletal collections are the ideal platform on which to test the suitability of new methodological approaches before their application to unknown remains.
This Special Issue is aimed at promoting the study of human remains in forensic anthropology using innovative ideas, methodological approaches, and technical improvements also taking into account the new frontiers of artificial intelligence with the purposes of identification and biological profile estimation, reconstruction of crime contexts, natural disasters, and violent events as well.
Prof. Dr. Maria Giovanna Belcastro
Dr. Marco Milella
Guest Editors
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Keywords
- human skeletons
- sexual dimorphism
- age estimation
- documented skeletal collections
- computed tomography
- morphometric geometry
- digitalization
- machine learning
- traumatic lesions
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