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Bridget F. B. Algee-Hewitt

Researcher at Stanford University

Publications -  36
Citations -  623

Bridget F. B. Algee-Hewitt is an academic researcher from Stanford University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Population & Forensic anthropology. The author has an hindex of 12, co-authored 34 publications receiving 505 citations. Previous affiliations of Bridget F. B. Algee-Hewitt include University of Tennessee & Florida State University.

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Estimation and evidence in forensic anthropology: sex and race.

TL;DR: This analysis shows the extreme importance of an informative prior in any forensic application and shows that the sex of the individual can be reliably estimated using a small set of 11 craniometric variables.
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Individual Identifiability Predicts Population Identifiability in Forensic Microsatellite Markers.

TL;DR: It is concluded that population identifiability regularly follows as a byproduct of the use of highly polymorphic forensic markers, and the design of new forensic marker sets is examined.
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Linkage disequilibrium matches forensic genetic records to disjoint genomic marker sets

TL;DR: The method can link a dataset similar to those used in genomic studies with another dataset containing markers used for forensics, and it shows that records can be matched across genotype datasets that have no shared markers based on linkage disequilibrium between loci appearing in different datasets.
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Modeling Bone Surface Morphology: A Fully Quantitative Method for Age-at-Death Estimation Using the Pubic Symphysis.

TL;DR: This paper presents an objective, fully quantitative method for estimating age‐at‐death from the skeleton, which exploits a variance‐based score of surface complexity computed from vertices obtained from a scanner sampling the pubic symphysis.
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An enhanced computational method for age-at-death estimation based on the pubic symphysis using 3D laser scans and thin plate splines

TL;DR: A more objective, quantitative method that analyzes three-dimensional surface scans of the pubic symphysis using a thin plate spline algorithm (TPS) that yields estimates comparable to established methods but offers a fully integrated, objective and quantitative framework of analysis and has potential for use in archaeological and forensic casework.