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Craniometric variation and ancestry estimation in two contemporary Caribbean populations

机译:两种当代加勒比人群的颅仪变异与祖先估算

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摘要

Ancestry estimation of skeletonized remains by forensic anthropologists is conducted through comparative means, and a lack of population-specific data results in possible misclassifications. This is especially germane to individuals of Latin American ancestry. Generally, each country in Latin America can trace their ancestral lineage through three main parental groups: Indigenous, European, and African. However, grouping all Latin American individuals under the broad "Hispanic" category ignores the specific genetic contributions from each parental group, which is variable and dependent on the population histories and sociocultural dynamics of each country. This study analyzes the craniometric ancestry of Hispaniola (the Dominican Republic and Haiti) using 190 cranial Computed Tomography (CT) scans (f = 103; m = 87), along with the island's history, to explore similarities and differences between the two groups. MANOVA results indicate that 53.6% and 71.4% of the 28 cranial measurements differ between the ancestries and sexes, respectively; and intraobserver error analyses demonstrate that 85.7% of measurements from CT scans are good-excellent in reliability. Further, a total of 12 canonical discriminant function analyses produced cross-validated classification accuracies of 73.7-78.6% for females, 71.8-87.5% for males, and 72.0-77.8% for pooled sex. This study demonstrates that, despite sharing a small island, Dominican and Haitian individuals can be differentiated with a fair amount of statistical certainty, which is possible due to complex socio-cultural, -political, and -demographic factors that have produced and maintained genetic heterogeneity. Moreover, the discriminant functions provided here can be used by the international forensic science community to identify individuals living on Hispaniola. (C) 2019 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
机译:通过比较手段进行骨折遗骸的血型估计,通过比较手段进行,缺乏人口特异性数据导致可能的错误分类。这对拉丁美洲祖先的个人来说特别是杰明。一般来说,拉丁美洲的每个国家都可以通过三个主要父母群体追查他们的祖先血统:土着,欧洲和非洲。但是,在广泛的“西班牙裔”类别下,将所有拉丁美洲个人分组忽视了每个家庭团体的特定遗传贡献,这是可变的,依赖每个国家的人口历史和社会文化动态。本研究分析了Hispaniola(多米尼加共和国和海地)的颅骨祖先使用190颅上计算机断层扫描(CT)扫描(F = 103; M = 87)以及岛屿的历史,探讨两组之间的相似性和差异。 Manova结果表明,28个颅尺度的53.6%和71.4%分别在祖先和性别之间存在差异;和intraObserver错误分析表明,来自CT扫描的85.7%的测量是具有优异的可靠性。此外,总共12个规范判别函数分析,为女性提供了73.7-78.6%的交叉验证分类精度,71.8-87.5%,72.0-77.8%,合并性的性别。本研究表明,尽管分享了一个小岛屿,多米尼加和海地个人可以与统计确定性的相当数量的统计确定性区分,这是由于产生和维持遗传异质性的复杂的社会文化, - 政治和 - 识别因素。此外,这里提供的判别职能可以由国际法医科学界使用,识别生活在Hispaniola上的个人。 (c)2019年Elsevier B.V.保留所有权利。

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