DocumentCode
116533
Title
CRIMETRACER: Activity space based crime location prediction
Author
Tayebi, Mohammad A. ; Ester, Martin ; Glasser, Uwe ; Brantingham, Patricia L.
Author_Institution
Sch. of Comput. Sci., Simon Fraser Univ., Burnaby, BC, Canada
fYear
2014
fDate
17-20 Aug. 2014
Firstpage
472
Lastpage
480
Abstract
Crime reduction and prevention strategies are vital for policymakers and law enforcement to face inevitable increases in urban crime rates as a side effect of the projected growth of urban population by the year 2030. Studies conclude that crime does not occur uniformly across urban landscapes but concentrates in certain areas. This phenomenon has drawn attention to spatial crime analysis, primarily focusing on crime hotspots, areas with disproportionally higher crime density. In this paper we present CRIMETRACER, a personalized random walk based approach to spatial crime analysis and crime location prediction outside of hotspots. We propose a probabilistic model of spatial behavior of known offenders within their activity space. Crime Pattern Theory concludes that offenders, rather than venture into unknown territory, frequently commit opportunistic crimes and serial violent crimes by taking advantage of opportunities they encounter in places they are most familiar with as part of their activity space. Our experiments on a large real-world crime dataset show that CRIMETRACER outperforms all other methods used for location recommendation we evaluate here.
Keywords
criminal law; data analysis; data mining; probability; CRIMETRACER; activity space based crime location prediction; advanced crime data analysis methods; crime density; crime pattern theory; crime prevention strategy; crime reduction; law enforcement; linking data mining algorithms; location recommendation; personalized random walk based approach; policymakers; probabilistic model; serial violent crimes; spatial behavior; spatial crime analysis; urban crime rates; urban landscapes; Computational modeling; Mathematical model; Predictive models; Roads; Social network services; Space exploration; Vectors; Activity space; Co-offending networks; Crime occurrence space; Predictive policing; Random walk model;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Advances in Social Networks Analysis and Mining (ASONAM), 2014 IEEE/ACM International Conference on
Conference_Location
Beijing
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/ASONAM.2014.6921628
Filename
6921628
Link To Document