Forensically useful mid-term and short-term temperature reconstruction for quasi-indoor death scenes
J\k{e}drzej Wydra, {\L}ukasz Smaga, Szymon Matuszewski

TL;DR
This paper introduces two novel temperature reconstruction methods using only temperature data, enabling accurate forensic PMI estimation over short and mid-term periods in quasi-indoor death scenes.
Contribution
It presents a concurrent regression model for mid-term and a Fourier-based model for short-term temperature reconstruction, both requiring only temperature data and applicable in forensic contexts.
Findings
Mid-term model achieves near-perfect accuracy over 6 days.
Short-term model reaches similar accuracy within 4-5 hours.
Methods are validated in six different quasi-indoor environments.
Abstract
Accurate reconstruction of ambient temperature at death scenes is crucial for estimating the postmortem interval (PMI) in forensic science. Typically, this is done by correcting weather station temperatures using measurements from the scene, often through linear regression. While recent attempts to use alternative algorithms like GAM have improved accuracy, they usually require additional variables such as humidity, making them impractical. This study presents two methods for accurate temperature reconstruction using only temperature data. The first, a concurrent regression model, is known in mathematics and is applied here for mid-term reconstructions (several days of measurements). The second, a new method based on Fourier expansion, is designed for short-term reconstructions (only a few hours of measurements). Both models were tested in quasi-indoor conditions, using data from six…
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Taxonomy
TopicsForensic Entomology and Diptera Studies · Paleopathology and ancient diseases · Forensic Anthropology and Bioarchaeology Studies
