CVAIAug 19, 2024

Towards Automation of Human Stage of Decay Identification: An Artificial Intelligence Approach

Meta AI
arXiv:2408.10414v12 citationsh-index: 52
Originality Synthesis-oriented
AI Analysis

This addresses the need for scalable and objective methods in forensic science to estimate postmortem intervals, though it is incremental as it applies existing AI models to a new domain-specific task.

This study tackled the problem of automating human stage of decay identification by training deep learning models on a large dataset of decomposition images, achieving macro-averaged F1 scores up to .881 for classifying stages using methods like Megyesi's and Gelderman's, with reliability comparable to human experts.

Determining the stage of decomposition (SOD) is crucial for estimating the postmortem interval and identifying human remains. Currently, labor-intensive manual scoring methods are used for this purpose, but they are subjective and do not scale for the emerging large-scale archival collections of human decomposition photos. This study explores the feasibility of automating two common human decomposition scoring methods proposed by Megyesi and Gelderman using artificial intelligence (AI). We evaluated two popular deep learning models, Inception V3 and Xception, by training them on a large dataset of human decomposition images to classify the SOD for different anatomical regions, including the head, torso, and limbs. Additionally, an interrater study was conducted to assess the reliability of the AI models compared to human forensic examiners for SOD identification. The Xception model achieved the best classification performance, with macro-averaged F1 scores of .878, .881, and .702 for the head, torso, and limbs when predicting Megyesi's SODs, and .872, .875, and .76 for the head, torso, and limbs when predicting Gelderman's SODs. The interrater study results supported AI's ability to determine the SOD at a reliability level comparable to a human expert. This work demonstrates the potential of AI models trained on a large dataset of human decomposition images to automate SOD identification.

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