Evaluation of Four 3D Facial Scanning Technologies: From Photogrammetry to Structured-Light Systems in Clinical Dentistry
Oana Elena Burlacu Vatamanu, Corina Marilena Cristache, Sergiu Drafta, Vanda Roxana Nimigean

TL;DR
This study compares four 3D facial scanning technologies for accuracy and speed in clinical dentistry, finding structured-light systems to be the most reliable.
Contribution
The study evaluates the trueness and orientation-dependent performance of four 3D facial scanning technologies in a clinical dentistry context.
Findings
Structured-light scanning had the smallest deviations and highest accuracy for facial measurements.
Photogrammetry and NeRF-based methods showed larger errors and were less suitable for clinical use.
Horizontal measurements had greater deviations than vertical ones across all systems.
Abstract
Background/Objectives: Accurate three-dimensional (3D) facial scanning is increasingly important in digital dentistry for diagnosis, treatment planning, and virtual patient creation. Multiple facial scanning technologies are available; however, their metric reliability varies depending on acquisition principles and anatomical orientation. This study aimed to evaluate the trueness, orientation-dependent performance (vertical midline versus horizontal facial measurements), and scanning time of four facial scanning technologies using calibrated manual anthropometry as the reference standard. Methods: Thirty dentate adult participants received adhesive fiducial markers on five predefined facial landmarks. Four linear facial distances were measured clinically using a digital caliper and compared with corresponding measurements obtained from standardized 3D facial scans. Digital measurements…
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Taxonomy
TopicsOrthodontics and Dentofacial Orthopedics · Dental Research and COVID-19 · Dental materials and restorations
