NCJ Number
248840
Journal
Journal of Royal Statistical Society: Series A (Statistics in Society) Volume: 178 Issue: 2 Dated: February 2015 Pages: 465-480
Date Published
February 2015
Length
16 pages
Annotation
This article proposes a Bayesian model-based clustering approach for criminal events.
Abstract
Statistical clustering of criminal events can be used by crime analysts to create lists of potential suspects for an unsolved crime to identify groups of crimes that may have been committed by the same individuals or group of individuals, for offender profiling and for predicting future events. The authors approach is semi-supervised, because the offender is known for a subset of the events, and utilizes spatio-temporal crime locations as well as crime features describing the offender's modus operandi. The hierarchical model naturally handles complex features that are often seen in crime data, including missing data, interval-censored event times and a mix of discrete and continuous variables. In addition, the proposed Bayesian model produces posterior clustering probabilities which allow analysts to act on model output only as warranted. This approach is illustrated by using a large data set of burglaries in 2009-2010 in Baltimore County, Maryland. (Publisher abstract modified)
Date Published: February 1, 2015
Similar Publications
- Firearm Purchase Behavior and Subsequent Adverse Events
- Attitudes Toward Police and Judges of Latina Immigrants With a Justice-Involved Child: Do Documentation Status and Family Deportations Matter?
- US Medical-Legal Partnerships to Address Health-Harming Legal Needs: Closing the Health Injustice Gap