Background/Objectives: Sex estimation from craniofacial morphology is a fundamental component of biological profile construction in forensic anthropology. Population-specific reference data for Thai individuals derived from computed tomography (CT) remain limited, and direct comparisons between discriminant function analysis (DFA) and machine learning classifiers are frequently complicated by inconsistent validation protocols. This study aimed to characterize sexual dimorphism in CT-derived craniofacial measurements, compare the classification performance of DFA, support vector machine (SVM), and random forest (RF) under a unified validation protocol, and demonstrate their practical application in a forensic context. Methods: CT images from 300 Thai adults (150 males, 150 females; age range 20–90 years) were obtained from Srinagarind Hospital, Khon Kaen University. Eight linear craniofacial measurements spanning the cranial vault, facial skeleton, nasal aperture, and orbital region were obtained from each case. DFA, SVM, and RF were developed and compared under a unified leave-one-out cross-validation protocol. Classification performance was assessed using accuracy, AUC, and Matthews correlation coefficient (MCC). Results: Seven of eight measurements exhibited statistically significant sexual dimorphism, with facial breadth and nasal height demonstrating the greatest dimorphism. DFA achieved the highest classification accuracy of 85.7%, AUC of 0.924, and MCC of 0.713, incorporating five measurements into the canonical function. SVM and RF achieved comparable accuracy of 84.7% and 84.0%, respectively. All three classifiers correctly classified both forensic application cases with high confidence. Conclusions: CT-derived craniofacial measurements provide a reliable basis for sex estimation in Thai adults. The convergence of performance across all three classifiers under a unified internal validation protocol strengthens confidence in the internally validated performance estimates. The derived discriminant function equation and saved machine learning models constitute a complementary and immediately applicable toolkit for CT-based forensic sex estimation in the Thai population.
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Suthat Duangchit
Woranan Kirisattayakul
Prin Twinprai
Forensic Sciences
Khon Kaen University
Naresuan University
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Duangchit et al. (Wed,) studied this question.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/69d896a46c1944d70ce08281 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.3390/forensicsci6020035
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