Validation of a low-cost laser scanner device for the assessment of three-dimensional facial anatomy in living subjects |
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Authors: | Daniele Gibelli Valentina Pucciarelli Zuzana Caplova Annalisa Cappella Claudia Dolci Cristina Cattaneo Chiarella Sforza |
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Affiliation: | 1. LAFAS, Laboratorio di Anatomia Funzionale dell’Apparato Stomatognatico, (Chief of the laboratory: Prof. Chiarella Sforza, MD), Dipartimento di Scienze Biomediche per la Salute, Università degli Studi di Milano, Milano, Italy;2. LABANOF, Laboratorio di Antropologia e Odontologia Forense, Dipartimento di Scienze Biomediche per la Salute, Università degli Studi di Milano, Milano, Italy |
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Abstract: | The present study compared the reliability of a low-cost laser scanner device to an already-validated stereophotogrammetric instrument. Fifty volunteers underwent duplicate facial scans through laser scanner and stereophotogrammetry. Intra- and inter-instrument reproducibility of linear distances, angles, facial surface area and volume was verified through the Bland–Altman test and calculation of absolute (TEM) and relative (rTEM) technical errors of measurement; rTEM was then classified as follows: <1% excellent; 1–3.9% very good; 4–6.9% good; 7–9.9% moderate; >10% poor. The scans performed through different devices were registered and superimposed to calculate the root mean square (RMS) (point-to-point) distance between the two surfaces. The same protocol was applied to a mannequin head. In inter-instruments comparison, 12/26 measurements showed a “good” rTEM; 5 were “very good”. In intra-instrument comparison, most performances worsened, with only 10 of 26 measurements classified as “good” and “very good”. All the measurements made on mannequin scans were at least “good”, and 14/26 were “very good”. Surface area was “very good” only in intra-instrument comparison; conversely, volumes were poorly repeatable for all the comparisons. On average, RMS point-to-point distances were 0.65 mm (inter-devices comparison), 0.56 mm (mannequin scans), 0.42 mm (intra-device comparison). In conclusion, the low-cost laser scan device can be reliably applied to inanimate objects, but does not meet the standards for three-dimensional facial acquisition on living persons. |
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Keywords: | Facial anatomy Low-cost laser scanner Stereophotogrammetry RMS (root mean square) |
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