Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/10400.1/12527
Title: The effect of numerical aperture on quantitative use-wear studies and its implication on reproducibility
Author: Calandra, Ivan
Schunk, Lisa
Bob, Konstantin
Gneisinger, Walter
Pedergnana, Antonella
Paixao, Eduardo
Hildebrandt, Andreas
Marreiros, Joao
Issue Date: Apr-2019
Publisher: Nature Publishing Group
Abstract: Many archeologists are skeptical about the capabilities of use-wear analysis to infer on the function of archeological tools, mainly because the method is seen as subjective, not standardized and not reproducible. Quantitative methods in particular have been developed and applied to address these issues. However, the importance of equipment, acquisition and analysis settings remains underestimated. One of those settings, the numerical aperture of the objective, has the potential to be one of the major factors leading to reproducibility issues. Here, experimental flint and quartzite tools were imaged using laser-scanning confocal microscopy with two objectives having the same magnification but different numerical apertures. The results demonstrate that 3D surface texture ISO 25178 parameters differ significantly when the same surface is measured with objectives having different numerical apertures. It is, however, unknown whether this property would blur or mask information related to use of the tools. Other acquisition and analyses settings are also discussed. We argue that to move use-wear analysis toward standardization, repeatability and reproducibility, the first step is to report all acquisition and analysis settings. This will allow the reproduction of use-wear studies, as well as tracing the differences between studies to given settings.
Peer review: yes
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/10400.1/12527
DOI: 10.1038/s41598-019-42713-w
ISSN: 2045-2322
Appears in Collections:FCH2-Artigos (em revistas ou actas indexadas)

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