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07-12-2024 | Autopsy | Original Article

Fatal fall from a height: is it possible to apply artificial intelligence techniques for height estimation?

Authors: Alberto Blandino, Anna Maria Zanaboni, Dario Malchiodi, Carlotta Virginia Di Francesco, Claudio Spada, Chiara Faraone, Guido Vittorio Travaini, Michelangelo Bruno Casali

Published in: International Journal of Legal Medicine

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Abstract

Fall from a height trauma is characterized by a multiplicity of injuries, related to multiple factors. The height of the fall is the factor that most influences the kinetic energy of the body and appears to be one of the factors that most affects the extent of injury. The purpose of this work is to evaluate, through machine learning algorithms, whether the autopsy injury pattern can be useful in estimating fall height. 455 victims of falls from a height which underwent a complete autopsy were retrospectively analyzed. The cases were enlisted by dividing them into 7 groups according to the height of the fall: 6 or less meters; 9 m, 12 m, 15 m, 18 m, 21 m, 24 m or more. Autoptic data were registered through the use of a previously published visceral and skeletal table. A total of 25 descriptors were used. Reduction of values in the range, standard and robust scaling were used as preprocessing methods. Principal Component Analysis, Single Value Decomposition and Independent Component Analysis were applied for dimensionality reduction. Cross validation was performed with 5 internal and external folds to ensure the validity of the results. The learning algorithms that generated the best models were Linear Regression, Support Vector Regressor, Kernel Ridge, Decision trees and Random forests. The best mean absolute error was 4.58 ± 1.28 m when dimensionality reduction was applied. Without any dimensionality reduction, the best result was 4.37 ± 1.27 m, suggesting a good performance of the proposed algorithms, with better performance when dimensionality is not automatically reduced.
Literature
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Metadata
Title
Fatal fall from a height: is it possible to apply artificial intelligence techniques for height estimation?
Authors
Alberto Blandino
Anna Maria Zanaboni
Dario Malchiodi
Carlotta Virginia Di Francesco
Claudio Spada
Chiara Faraone
Guido Vittorio Travaini
Michelangelo Bruno Casali
Publication date
07-12-2024
Publisher
Springer Berlin Heidelberg
Published in
International Journal of Legal Medicine
Print ISSN: 0937-9827
Electronic ISSN: 1437-1596
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s00414-024-03371-4