Biology (Jul 2022)

Post-Mortem Interval of Human Skeletal Remains Estimated with Handheld NIR Spectrometry

  • Verena Maria Schmidt,
  • Philipp Zelger,
  • Claudia Wöss,
  • Christian Wolfgang Huck,
  • Rohit Arora,
  • Etienne Bechtel,
  • Andreas Stahl,
  • Andrea Brunner,
  • Bettina Zelger,
  • Michael Schirmer,
  • Walter Rabl,
  • Johannes Dominikus Pallua

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/biology11071020
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 7
p. 1020

Abstract

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Estimating the post-mortem interval (PMI) of human skeletal remains is a critical issue of forensic analysis, with important limitations such as sample preparation and practicability. In this work, NIR spectroscopy (NIRONE® Sensor X; Spectral Engines, 61449, Germany) was applied to estimate the PMI of 104 human bone samples between 1 day and 2000 years. Reflectance data were repeatedly collected from eight independent spectrometers between 1950 and 1550 nm with a spectral resolution of 14 nm and a step size of 2 nm, each from the external and internal bone. An Artificial Neural Network was used to analyze the 66,560 distinct diagnostic spectra, and clearly distinguished between forensic and archaeological bone material: the classification accuracies for PMIs of 0–2 weeks, 2 weeks–6 months, 6 months–1 year, 1 year–10 years, and >100 years were 0.90, 0.94, 0.94, 0.93, and 1.00, respectively. PMI of archaeological bones could be determined with an accuracy of 100%, demonstrating the adequate predictive performance of the model. Applying a handheld NIR spectrometer to estimate the PMI of human skeletal remains is rapid and extends the repertoire of forensic analyses as a distinct, novel approach.

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