Identifying Factors to Help Improve Existing Decomposition-Based PMI Estimation Methods
Anna-Maria Nau, Phillip Ditto, Dawnie Wolfe Steadman, Audris Mockus

TL;DR
This study improves postmortem interval estimation by leveraging larger datasets and incorporating demographic and weather factors into advanced models, significantly reducing prediction errors compared to previous formulas.
Contribution
It introduces a comprehensive approach that combines larger sample sizes with additional factors, enhancing the accuracy of PMI and ADD estimation models over existing methods.
Findings
Including demographic and weather factors improves model accuracy.
Best models achieved lower RMSE than previous formulas.
Larger datasets enable more reliable PMI/ADD predictions.
Abstract
Accurately assessing the postmortem interval (PMI) is an important task in forensic science. Some of the existing techniques use regression models that use a decomposition score to predict the PMI or accumulated degree days (ADD), however, the provided formulas are based on very small samples and the accuracy is low. With the advent of Big Data, much larger samples can be used to improve PMI estimation methods. We, therefore, aim to investigate ways to improve PMI prediction accuracy by (a) using a much larger sample size, (b) employing more advanced linear models, and (c) enhancing models with factors known to affect the human decay process. Specifically, this study involved the curation of a sample of 249 human subjects from a large-scale decomposition dataset, followed by evaluating pre-existing PMI/ADD formulas and fitting increasingly sophisticated models to estimate the PMI/ADD.…
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Taxonomy
TopicsForensic Entomology and Diptera Studies · Suicide and Self-Harm Studies · Autopsy Techniques and Outcomes
