Exploring cranial growth patterns from birth to adulthood for forensic research and practice
Loading...
Date
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
MDPI
Abstract
BACKGROUND : Although cranial growth has been extensively explored, forensic and biological anthropology lack a formal incorporation of how cranial growth processes impact the adult phenotype and downstream biological profile estimations.
OBJECTIVES : This research uses an ontogenetic framework to identify when interlandmark distances (ILDs) stabilize during growth to reach adult levels of variation and to evaluate patterns of cranial sexual size dimorphism.
METHODS : Multivariate adaptive regression splines (MARS) were conducted on standardized cranial ILDs for 595 individuals from the Subadult Virtual Anthropology Database (SVAD) and the Forensic Data Bank (FDB) aged between birth and 25 years. Cross-Validated R-squared (CVRSq) values evaluated ILD variation explained by age while knot placements identified meaningful changes in ILD growth trajectories.
RESULTS : Results reveal the ages at which males and females reach craniometric maturity across splanchnocranium, neurocranium, basicranium and cross-regional ILDs. Changes in growth patterns observed here largely align with growth milestones of integrated soft tissue and skeletal structures as well as developmental milestones like puberty.
CONCLUSIONS : Our findings highlight the variability in growth by sex and cranial region and move forensic anthropologists towards recognizing cranial growth as a mosaic, continuous process with overlap between subadults and adults rather than consistently approaching subadult and adult research separately.
Description
AVAILABILITY DATA STATEMENT : The data presented in this this study are available upon request from the corresponding author (SVAD) or with permission of Drs. Richard Jantz and Kate Spradley (FDB). The data collection protocols are openly available: Amira [doi:10.5281/zenodo.5348411] and Data collection Protocol: Cranial Landmarks and Craniometrics [doi:10.5281/zenodo.6625998].
Keywords
Ontogeny, Craniometric interlandmark distances, Multivariate adaptive regression splines (MARS), Forensic anthropology, Subadult Virtual Anthropology Database (SVAD), Interlandmark distances (ILDs), Cranial sexual size dimorphism
Sustainable Development Goals
SDG-03: Good health and well-being
Citation
New, B.T., Stull, K.E., Corron, L.K. & Wolfe, C.A. Exploring Cranial Growth Patterns from Birth to Adulthood for Forensic Research and Practice. Forensic Sciences 2025, 5, 32: 1-36. https://doi.org/10.3390/forensicsci5030032.
