Tooth morphometry using quasi-conformal theory

Gary P.T. Choi, Hei Long Chan, Robin Yong, Sarbin Ranjitkar, Alan Brook, Grant Townsend, Ke Chen, Lok Ming Lui*

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

24 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

Shape analysis is important in anthropology, bioarchaeology and forensic science for interpreting useful information from human remains. In particular, teeth are morphologically stable and hence well-suited for shape analysis. In this work, we propose a framework for tooth morphometry using quasi-conformal theory. Landmark-matching Teichmüller maps are used for establishing a 1-1 correspondence between tooth surfaces with prescribed anatomical landmarks. Then, a quasi-conformal statistical shape analysis model based on the Teichmüller mapping results is proposed for building a tooth classification scheme. We deploy our framework on a dataset of human premolars to analyze the tooth shape variation among genders and ancestries. Experimental results show that our method achieves much higher classification accuracy with respect to both gender and ancestry when compared to the existing methods. Furthermore, our model reveals the underlying tooth shape difference between different genders and ancestries in terms of the local geometric distortion and curvatures. In particular, our experiment suggests that the shape difference between genders is mostly captured by the conformal distortion but not the curvatures, while that between ancestries is captured by both of them.

Original languageEnglish
Article number107064
Number of pages11
JournalPattern Recognition
Volume99
Early online date26 Sept 2019
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 31 Mar 2020
Externally publishedYes

Funding

Gary P. T. Choi was supported by the Croucher Foundation, the Harvard Quantitative Biology Initiative and the NSF-Simons Center for Mathematical and Statistical Analysis of Biology at Harvard (Award number: #1764269). Lok Ming Lui was supported by HKRGC GRF (Project ID: 14303414 ). Gary P. T. Choi is with the John A. Paulson School of Engineering and Applied Sciences, Harvard University. His research interests include computational geometry, mathematical modeling and medical imaging. Hei Long Chan is with the Department of Mathematics, The Chinese University of Hong Kong. His research interests include medical imaging, shape analysis and image segmentation. Robin Yong is with the Adelaide Dental School, The University of Adelaide. His research interests include dental anthropology and 3D imaging. Sarbin Ranjitkar is with the Adelaide Dental School, The University of Adelaide. His research interests include dental phenomics and craniofacial biology. Alan Brook is with the Adelaide Dental School, The University of Adelaide. His research interests include medical anthropology and biological anthropology. Grant Townsend is with the Adelaide Dental School, The University of Adelaide. His research interests include craniofacial biology and medical anthropology. Ke Chen is with the Department of Mathematical Sciences, The University of Liverpool. His research interests include mathematical imaging and numerical linear algebra. Lok Ming Lui is with the Department of Mathematics, The Chinese University of Hong Kong. His research interests include computational quasi-conformal geometry and medical imaging.

Keywords

  • ancestry
  • classification
  • quasi-conformal theory
  • sexual dimorphism
  • shape analysis
  • teichmüller map
  • tooth morphometry

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