Effects of victim’s body posture and attacker’s gender on slashing attacks: a biomechanical study
Shangxiao Li, Shufang Yuan, Yi Shi, Bin Ni, Wenxia Guo, Chaopeng Yang, Mingzhi Wang, Weiya Hao

TL;DR
This study examines how the victim's posture and attacker's gender affect slashing injuries using a kitchen knife on a dummy, providing insights for forensic analysis.
Contribution
The study quantifies biomechanical differences in slashing attacks based on victim posture and attacker gender, offering new forensic indicators.
Findings
Slashing a standing dummy resulted in shorter contact time and higher hip velocity compared to a supine dummy.
Male participants showed higher slashing velocity, force, and energy compared to female participants.
Gender differences in slashing severity may be related to body weight differences.
Abstract
Sharp force injury has been and will remain to be a major cause of violent death; however, scientific evaluations on the impact of body posture of the victim and gender of the perpetrator on sharp force injury have been scarce. The purpose of this study was to evaluate the biomechanical characteristics found in individuals (male and female) when using a Chinese kitchen knife to slash the neck of a dummy while it was in the standing and supine positions. This work offers a solid basis for forensic identifications, criminal investigations, and court trials. A total of 12 male and 12 female college students participated in this study. Kinematic, kinetic, and surface electromyography (sEMG) data were evaluated when slashing the neck of a dummy while it was in the standing and supine positions using a Chinese kitchen knife. When slashing the neck of a standing dummy, participants showed…
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Taxonomy
TopicsTraumatic Ocular and Foreign Body Injuries · Gun Ownership and Violence Research · Musculoskeletal pain and rehabilitation
