Abstract
Evidence acquisition, interpretation and preservation are essential parts of forensic case work that make a standardized documentation process fundamental. The most commonly used method for the documentation and interpretation of superficial wounds is a combination of two modalities: two-dimensional (2D) photography for evidence preservation and real-life examination for wound analysis. As technologies continue to develop, 2D photography is being enhanced with three-dimensional (3D) documentation technology. In our study, we compared the real-life examination of superficial wounds using four different technical documentation and visualization methods.
To test the different methods, a mannequin was equipped with several injury stickers, and then the different methods were applied. A total of 42 artificial injury stickers were documented in regard to orientation, form, color, size, wound borders, wound corners and suspected mechanism of injury for the injury mechanism. As the gold standard, superficial wounds were visually examined by two board-certified forensic pathologists directly on the mannequin. These results were compared to an examination using standard 2D forensic photography; 2D photography using the multicamera system Botscan©, which included predefined viewing positions all around the body; and 3D photogrammetric reconstruction based on images visualized both on screen and in a virtual reality (VR) using a head-mounted display (HMD).
The results of the gold standard examination showed that the two forensic pathologists had an inter-reader agreement ranging from 69% for the orientation and 11% for the size of the wounds. A substantial portion of the direct visual documentation showed only a partial overlap, especially for the items of size and color, thereby prohibiting the statistical comparison of these two items. A forest plot analysis of the remaining six items showed no significant difference between the methods. We found that among the forensic pathologists, there was high variability regarding the vocabulary used for the description of wound morphology, which complicated the exact comparison of the two documentations of the same wound.
There were no significant differences for any of the four methods compared to the gold standard, thereby challenging the role of real-life examination and 2D photography as the most reliable documentation approaches. Further studies with real injuries are necessary to support our evaluation that technical examination methods involving multicamera systems and 3D visualization for whole-body examination might be a valid alternative in future forensic documentation.
Similar content being viewed by others
Avoid common mistakes on your manuscript.
Introduction
The objective documentation and description of superficial injuries is a fundamental part of forensic examinations [1]. The documentation process is often standardized and includes a collection of written statements together with drawn sketches of the injury locations and photographic documentation of the evidence [2]. Such documentation preserves the forensic evidence and should be in a format that enables specialists to form a second opinion, which would ideal confirm the original conclusions and thus allow rigorous quality control for the prevention of misdiagnoses [3]. To characterize superficial injuries, information about their localization, color, size, form, orientation, wound angles and corners, as well as the suspected mechanism of injury involved, must be documented [1]. Currently, the established method for the documentation of this forensic information is two-dimensional (2D) photography [4], including written findings of the injuries made by a forensic pathologist. Since the replacement of analogue cameras with digital cameras, professional photographers and forensic pathologists, medical examiners and specialists with police forces can perform photo-documentation. Experience has shown that it is not enough to rely on the automatic functions of the digital camera to meet the requirements of forensic documentation and that proper training is required prior to photo-documentation [5]. Even if a 2D photograph has no technical flaws, it still consists of a projection of a three-dimensional (3D) scene on a 2D plane and therefore cannot preserve all the spatial information of a superficial injury [4]. One way to avoid such a loss of information is to use 3D photogrammetry. With this method, it is possible to document the 3D shape and orientation of an object in space by using two or more overlapping images [6]. In forensic medicine, photogrammetry has been used to match injury-causing objects to detected wounds [7,8,9,10] and has been shown to be more precise in the measurement of wound size than the 2D photography method [11]. 3D documentation requires the examined object to stay stationary during data acquisition, which can be an issue, especially with living persons. A solution to this issue has been presented by Leipner et al., who used a multicamera device to perform 3D documentation on living people [12]. However, the final 3D model is usually visualized on a 2D computer screen, thereby eliminating depth information. One possibility for visualizing 3D injuries in 3D is through virtual reality (VR) head-mounted displays (HMDs) [4]. In addition to the advantage of observing 3D models in 3D, it is also possible to interact with and modify the models in this format [13, 14]. In a previous work, Koller et al. compared the accuracy of injury size measurements in 2D forensic photographs and with a 3D photogrammetric reconstruction in VR. It was shown that the VR measurements were more accurate than the measurements obtained using conventional 2D forensic photographs but less accurate than the measurements obtained using a 3D model visualized on a 2D screen [15]. However, previous studies have only measured the dimension of the injuries and have not analyzed whether it is possible to medically assess the acquired 3D documented injuries with the multi-camera device known as Botscan© [12].
Previous studies have been limited to objective measurements only. In this article, we compare the real-life examination and interpretation of injuries with technically assisted methods using standard 2D forensic photography, 2D photography with the Botscan© multicamera system and 3D photogrammetrically reconstructed 3D models examined both on a screen and in VR using an HMD.
Methods
As the aim of the current study was to analyze the forensic examination of superficial injuries using several visualization methods, we first established a gold standard based on real-life examination by board-certified forensic pathologists. For this study, two board-certified forensic pathologists each carried out an examination. The results of these direct examinations were then compared with those obtained using the four abovementioned technical documentation and display methods. While the 2D forensic photographs were taken separately, according to forensic standards, the other display methods relied on the same photographs taken by the multicamera device known as Botscan©. This documentation setting consisted of 70 synchronized DSLR cameras positioned around a person who was standing in an upright position that remotely and simultaneously took 70 pictures [12]. These photographs were then used for the generation of the 3D models that were subsequently analyzed both on screen and in VR.
Materials and hardware
For the real-life documentation of the injuries, we used the same mannequin with injury stickers, 2D forensic photographs and 3D models as those previously used by Michienzi et al. [11]. We acquired a second set of 2D photographs using Botscan©V1.0 (Botspot GmbH, Berlin, Germany), which is also known as Photobox. This separate dataset was acquired with additional scale bar stickers attached next to the injuries. The dataset was then used for examination using only the 2D photographs acquired by Photobox, without any further processing by a 3D model. The Photobox photos and the 2D photographs provided by Michienzi et al. were displayed as-is on a standard office computer screen, whereas the 3D models required dedicated additional processing.
For the visualization of the 3D models on a 2D computer screen, the software known as Cloud Compare (Version 2.6.1) was used. This software allows the rotation, scaling and panning of objects, which means that all the injuries on the 3D model could be viewed properly. The VR examination was performed using an HTC Vive (HTC, Taoyuan, Taiwan) HMD with two controllers and in Unity (Version 2018.1.8f1 Personal, Unity Technologies, San Francisco, United States) using Steam VR (v1.2.3, Valve Cooperation, Bellevue, Washington, United States). Due to the interactive nature of VR, the examiners were able to walk around the mannequin and move closer to the injuries they examined. Together with the gold standard, the four methods we compared in the current study (outlined in Fig. 1) are as follows:
-
Two real-life examinations of the mannequin
-
Standard forensic 2D photographs with scale bars (Fig. 1d)
-
Photobox data:
Examination
The 42 injuries on the mannequin were documented in writing by two board-certified forensic pathologists. These results were then compared with those obtained from examinations that used the four different indirect display methods. This method-specific analysis was performed by resident forensic pathologists. We were able to recruit four forensic pathology residents with 20, 17, 8, and 5 months of experience in forensic medicine. One of the board-certified pathologists used for the real-life documentation of the mannequin’s injuries had 14 years of working experience in forensic pathology, while the other pathologist had 5 years of experience. To avoid personal bias and ability influence on the methods, the 42 injuries were subdivided into four groups, each one of which focused on different body zonesand contained between ten and eleven wounds (Fig. 1e-i, Table 1).
Each zone was then analyzed with a different display method. By interchanging the zones regarding the depiction methods, we ensured that each resident would analyze every zone with a different display method and that no single zone would be analyzed with the same method by two different residents. To make the orientation in VR easier for the pathologists, the different zones were combined with a solid color representation of the whole-body context. The 2D Photobox analysis was performed last with each pathologist, as the images taken by Photobox showed large proportions of the body and thus required large amounts of image manipulation to avoid detection bias. Additionally, the injury dimension measurements were not performed using the 3D model on the screen, as was performed previously, proving that both methods allow for a higher level of accuracy than that allowed for by 2D forensic photographs [10, 11, 15].
Each injury was examined regarding orientation, form, color, size, wound borders, wound corners and suspected mechanism of injury. These parameters were chosen in accordance with the documentation routine in forensic medicine. We chose to implement the variable of wound size to assess differences depending on the wound morphology or the underlining skin tone. A summary of the description items used is presented in Table 2.
Additionally, the physicians had the opportunity to give feedback about the subjective positive and negative aspects of every display method, as well as how sure they felt while performing the examination using each display method.
Data analysis
We compared the results of the real-life examinations of the mannequin with those from the four different display methods; we rated them to as different from, similar to or identical to each other. We rated two findings as different if there was no consensus. A partial consensus was rated as similar, and a complete overlap was rated as identical. For example, if a wound was characterized as having sharp borders with skin abrasion in both real-life examinations, then we rated the examinations as identical in regard to the category of the wound corners. If the same wound was characterized as having sharp borders but no skin abrasions using the display in VR, we classified this examination as being similar to the gold standard (Table 3). For comparisons between the display methods and the following statistical analysis, we used only the identical items from the two direct examinations because we wanted to have a consensus for our gold standard as a comparison base.
The items related to form were described with great variation in the terminology. To allow a statistical analysis, we decided to merge some terms if their differences were not significant, as follows:
-
Round and oval
-
Cloud-shaped and map-like
-
Spindle, elongated, linear, and striped
We performed an analysis to evaluate whether the examinations that used the technical display methods were significantly different from those that used the gold standard. We compared all the categories from the wounds that were examined identically in the direct documentation of the mannequin with the examination of the corresponding wounds using each display technique. The statistical analysis was performed by the Department of Biostatistics of the University using R (Version 4.0.2, R Foundation for Statistical Computing, Vienna, Austria). A copy of the code used and the resulting forest plots can be found in the Appendix.
Results
The concordance in the real-life documentation varied substantially between the documented categories. The highest inter-reader agreement was 69% for the orientation category, whereas the lowest inter-reader agreement was 11% for the size of the wounds. Because we defined two sizes as being similar up to a difference of one centimeter, 81% of the measured wounds ended up in this classification. The three categories of orientation, form and color each had 29% of their items documented differently. The direct documentation of the mannequin was also rated differently in regard to the subjective certainty that the forensic pathologists felt during the examination. For both board-certified forensic pathologists, one rated their examination confidence with an 8, while the other rated their confidence as a 3, on a scale of 1 (uncertain) to 10 (most certain). Both pathologists felt that they missed the three-dimensional shape of the injury due to the flat stickers.
For the technical display methods, the categories of size and color were omitted due to the large differences already found in the gold standard method. Apart from those categories, all the techniques had their lowest agreement values for the suspected mechanism of injury, which ranged from 36% using the Botscan© technique to 23% using VR. The highest concordance value was 83% for the wound borders obtained using 2D forensic photography. All four residents were more comfortable with 2D forensic photography and the 2D Botscan© technique compared to 3D photogrammetry both on screen and using the VR approach. However, one out of the four residents preferred VR over 3D photogrammetry on screen. The total time required for all four examination procedures ranged between 1.25 and 2 h (Table 4 and 5).
We performed a forest-plot analysis to quantify the significant differences between the direct examination and the ones using the technical display methods. An example of this statistical analysis can be found in Fig. 2.
We summarized the statistical analysis in color-coded Table 6.
Discussion
Our goal was to compare the real-life examination and interpretation of injuries with technically assisted methods in 2D both on screen and in VR. Our data show no significant differences between any of the technical display methods and the direct examination. However, the specific analysis of the documentation categories shows a more diverse picture. The two categories of color and size could not be soundly evaluated due to the few identically documented items obtained in the direct evaluation. For the category of size, one reason for the low agreement value is that the length and width of the injury stickers were estimated using a ruler and not precisely measured. Unclear wound borders, together with different underlining skin tones, make a consistent demarcation difficult and probably accentuate the interpersonal differences in the estimation of an injury’s size. We have shown in previous publications [11, 15] that precise measurements using technical assisted methods are possible and achieve higher accuracy with the photogrammetry technique than with forensic 2D photography. For the category of color, the linguistic variety used in the description, as well as the different number of words used to describe a wound color, was probably the reason for this low level of consensus. This can be attributed to differences in the lexicon and ability to differentiate colors by the involved pathologists [16].
All the categories showed no significant differences with respect to the real-life examination, except the category of suspected mechanism of injury, which in our setup was less accurate using the VR method. It is conceivable that the image quality of the HMD was not high enough to allow a clear interpretation of this category. In addition, the residents had no prior training in navigation with VR; therefore, difficulties in moving closer to the injury or with the zooming function could have been a disadvantage compared to the other visualization methods.
There are some practical implications for the forensic documentation process based on our results. It has not yet been established in the forensic field to directly document wounds with pictures from a Botscan© photography set. For this reason, to preserve the spatial geometry, the generation of a 3D model usually follows photography with Photobox. Our results show that Photobox documentation can be used directly for the documentation process of superficial wounds, whether on the 2D photographs acquired by Photobox or the 3D model created based on these data. Furthermore, due to the time-consuming documentation process for forensic 2D photography, the variable possible quality of those pictures, and the inter-user variability, Photobox technology might be a better documentation method for standardizing the documentation and examination procedures and allowing for equal examination results, especially for the documentation of multiple superficial wounds occurring simultaneously in one individual. Regardless of the specific wound constellation, we recommend using an automated photographical documentation process in order to lower the photo-documentation subjectivity. In the future, it could also be possible to combine the Photobox technique with machine learning-based image analysis approaches, for example, as a sorting algorithm to detect relevant pictures prior to expert documentation or to preclassify injuries and allow forensic pathologists to then confirm or deny automatically performed examinations. However, one important prerequisite for any application of Photobox remains that the person pictured needs to be able to stand in an upright position, which limits the usage of Photobox on severely injured individuals.
Our setup had other relevant limitations. The documented wounds were injury stickers that lacked any profile or depth information, thereby making the differentiation between superficial and deep cuts difficult in the real-life examinations. Nevertheless, we decided to establish the real life as our gold standard. The number of forensic pathologists who participated in the current study was also rather low, with only two board-certified pathologists taking part in the real-life examination and four residents using the visualization methods. Furthermore, the influence of the different amount of experience on the documentation of superficial wounds between the residents on the one hand and between the residents and the senior pathologists on the other hand should be taken into consideration. To further validate our findings, future studies should compare examinations performed by forensic pathologists who have similar levels of experience. However, as the findings showed that even less-experienced residents can come to the same conclusion as those obtained by experienced pathologists, we can state that all four methods used in our setup allow for examinations that are as good as those that are directly performed on a person’s body. It is also worth mentioning that, apart from 2D forensic photography, all the technical display methods were new for the participating residents. This difference in routine could have influenced the documentation outcome in disfavor of the other three technical display methods. A final limitation was that some of the subcategories were described using a high linguistic variety because there was only partly standardized jargon available for their description, and this terminology varies across the different German-speaking regions of Switzerland, Germany and Austria. In our setup, the two board certified pathologists were trained in different institutions and even different countries, whereas the residents may have used a more homologous terminology due to their training being within the same institution under the same supervision. These factors reduced the number of identical items in the categories of color and size to a point where a statistical analysis could not yield significant results. Finally, for the other categories, the main investigator of this study was required to group certain descriptions together to make a statistical analysis possible.
In total, the four methods based on photographic documentation procedures showed no significant differences from the examinations performed directly on the mannequin. However, we observed a high level of variability in the inter-reader agreement in the real-life examination, particularly in regard to the subcategories that allowed a high level of linguistic variation during the descriptions. Our findings suggest that the documentation and visualization methods used herein qualify for the examination of superficial wounds. Further research, especially with real injuries, is needed to classify the ideal circumstances in which a technical display method could complement the current standards of forensic evidence documentation, examination and interpretation.
Conclusion
Technically assisted visualization and documentation options could have sound entry into the forensic field. While VR techniques might need further technical refinement to be used for the examination of superficial wounds, simultaneous photographic documentation using Photobox and 3D photogrammetry models can supplement the current standard approaches in the forensic field.
Key points
-
1.
Photobox and 3D photogrammetry models can support the forensic documentation process.
-
2.
Technical display methods can be used for the documentation and interpretation of superficial wounds.
-
3.
Wound documentation tends to be described with a high linguistic variability between forensic specialists.
References
Grassberger M, Schmid H, König A. Todesermittlung: Befundaufnahmen & Spurensicherung: ein praktischer Leitfaden für Polizei, Juristen und Ärzte. 1st ed. Vienna: Springer; 2009.
Grassberger M, Türk EE, Yen K. Klinisch-forensische Medizin: Interdisziplinärer Praxisleitfaden für Ärzte, Pflegekräfte, Juristen und Betreuer von Gewaltopfern. Vienna: Springer; 2013.
Urbanova P, Hejna P, JurdaM. Testing photogrammetry-based techniques for three-dimensional surface documentation in forensic pathology. Forensic Sci Int. 2015;25077–86.
Ebert LC, Nguyen TT, Breitbeck R, Braun M, Thali MJ, Ross S. The forensic holodeck: an immersive display for forensic crime scene reconstructions. Forensic Sci Med Pathol. 2014;10:623–6.
Dettmeyer R, Schütz HF, Verhoff M. Rechtsmedizin. Berlin, Heidelberg: Springer; 2019.
LuhmannT, Robson S, Kyle S, Boehm J. Close-range photogrammetry and 3D imaging. 2nd ed. Berlin: De Gruyter; 2013.
Thali MJ, Braun M, Bruschweiler W, Dirnhofer R. Matching tire tracks on the head using forensic photogrammetry. Forensic Sci Int. 2000;113:281–7.
Thali MJ, Braun M, Brueschweiler W, Dirnhofer R. “Morphological imprint”: determination of the injury-causing weapon from the wound morphology using forensic 3D/CAD-supported photogrammetry. Forensic Sci Int. 2013;132:177–81.
Bruschweiler W, Braun M, Dirnhofer R, Thali MJ. Analysis of patterned injuries and injury-causing instruments with forensic 3D/CAD supported photogrammetry (FPHG): an instruction manual for the documentation process. Forensic Sci Int. 2003;132:130–8.
Sieberth T, Ebert LC, Gentile S, Fliss B. Clinical forensic height measurements on injured people using a multi camera device for 3D documentation. Forensic Sci Med Pathol. 2020;16:586–94.
Michienzi R, Meier S, Ebert LC, Martinez RM, Sieberth T. Comparison of forensic photo-documentation to a photogrammetric solution using the multi-camera system “Botscan.” Forensic Sci Int. 2018;288:46–52.
Leipner A, Baumeister B, Thali MJ, Braun M, Dobler E, Ebert LC. Multi-camera system for 3D forensic documentation. Forensic Sci Int. 2016;261:123–8.
Craig A, Sherman WR, Will JD. Developing virtual reality applications: foundations of effective design. Burlington, Massachusetts: Morgan Kaufmann Publishers; 2009.
LaValle SM. Virtual Reality. http://lavalle.pl/vr/ 2019. Accessed 07 June 2021.
Koller S, Ebert LC, Martinez RM, SieberthT. Using virtual reality for forensic examinations of injuries. Forensic Sci Int. 2019;295:30–5.
Mylonas D, Paramei GV, MacDonald L. Gender differences in colour naming. In: Colour studies: A broad spectrum. Amsterdam: John Benjamins; 2014. pp. 225–39.
Acknowledgements
The authors want to express their gratitude to Emma Louise Kessler for supporting this work.
Funding
Open Access funding provided by Universität Zürich.
Author information
Authors and Affiliations
Corresponding author
Additional information
Publisher's note
Springer Nature remains neutral with regard to jurisdictional claims in published maps and institutional affiliations.
Supplementary Information
Below is the link to the electronic supplementary material.
Rights and permissions
Open Access This article is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License, which permits use, sharing, adaptation, distribution and reproduction in any medium or format, as long as you give appropriate credit to the original author(s) and the source, provide a link to the Creative Commons licence, and indicate if changes were made. The images or other third party material in this article are included in the article's Creative Commons licence, unless indicated otherwise in a credit line to the material. If material is not included in the article's Creative Commons licence and your intended use is not permitted by statutory regulation or exceeds the permitted use, you will need to obtain permission directly from the copyright holder. To view a copy of this licence, visit http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/.
About this article
Cite this article
Massini, F., Ebert, L., Ampanozi, G. et al. Comparison of superficial wound documentation using 2D forensic photography, 3D photogrammetry, Botscan© and VR with real-life examination. Forensic Sci Med Pathol 17, 422–430 (2021). https://doi.org/10.1007/s12024-021-00393-x
Accepted:
Published:
Issue Date:
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s12024-021-00393-x