title: |
Two different approaches to handle landmark location uncertainty in skull-face overlay:coevolution vs fuzzy landmarks |
|
publication: |
||
part of series: |
Advances in Intelligent Systems Research | |
| pages: | 334 - 341 | |
DOI: |
To be assigned soon (how to use a DOI) | |
author(s): |
¨Žscar Ib¨˘nez, ¨Žscar Cord¨Žn, Sergio Damas |
|
publication date: |
July 2011 |
|
keywords: |
Forensic identification, craniofacial superimposition, skull-face overlay, coevolution, cooperative coevolutionary algorithm, fuzzy landmarks,
evolutionary algorithms. |
|
abstract: |
Craniofacial superimposition is a forensic process where photographs or video shots of a missing person are compared with the skull that is
found. By projecting both photographs on top of
each other (or, even better, matching a scanned
three-dimensional skull model against the face
photo/video shot), the forensic anthropologist can
try to establish whether that is the same person.
The whole process is influenced by inherent uncertainty mainly because two objects of different nature (a skull and a face) are involved. In this paper,
we propose a novel approach, a cooperative coevolutionary algorithm, to deal with the use of imprecise cephalometric landmarks in the skull-face overlay process. Following this approach we are able
to look for both the best transformation parameters and the best landmark locations at the same
time. Coevolutionary skull-face overlay results are
compared with our previous fuzzy-evolutionary automatic method over six skull-face overlay problem
instances corresponding to three real-world cases
solved by the Physical Anthropology lab at the University of Granada (Spain). Promising results have
been achieved though the robustness of the method
should be improved. |
|
copyright: |
Š
Atlantis Press. This article is distributed under the
terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits
non-commercial use, distribution and reproduction in any medium,
provided the original work is properly cited. |
|
full text: |