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Allysha Powanda Winburn

Researcher at University of West Florida

Publications -  28
Citations -  309

Allysha Powanda Winburn is an academic researcher from University of West Florida. The author has contributed to research in topics: Forensic anthropology & Medicine. The author has an hindex of 7, co-authored 20 publications receiving 206 citations. Previous affiliations of Allysha Powanda Winburn include University of Florida & University of New Hampshire.

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A comparison of three established age estimation methods on an adult Spanish sample.

TL;DR: This study suggests that before systematic application of these three methodologies in Spanish populations, further statistical modeling and research into the covariance of chronological age with morphological change are necessary.
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Skeletal Identification by Radiographic Comparison: Blind Tests of a Morphoscopic Method Using Antemortem Chest Radiographs

TL;DR: The value of chest radiographs for the identification of disarticulated and even eroded skeletons, but only when methods are wielded by trained examiners are demonstrated.
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Forensic Applicability of Femur Subtrochanteric Shape to Ancestry Assessment in Thai and White American Males

TL;DR: The Thai data may be more useful in forensic analysis than previously published subtrochanteric data derived from Native American samples, and adapting methods to include appropriate geographic and contemporaneous populations increases the accuracy of femur subtroChanteric ancestry methods.
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Validation of the Acetabulum As a Skeletal Indicator of Age at Death in Modern European-Americans.

TL;DR: Results suggest that acetabular degeneration is a valid skeletal age‐at‐death indicator, and shows no associations with BMI or metabolic values, suggesting resistance to obesity and activity effects.
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Ancestral Diversity in Skeletal Collections: Perspectives on African American Body Donation

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors synthesize data from medical research on cadaver and organ donation, as well as anthropological literature on structural violence, embodiment, and the collection and curation of human remains, to present multiple perspectives on increasing African American body donation to anthropological research.