DocumentCode
1642100
Title
Crime Information Extraction from Police and Witness Narrative Reports
Author
Ku, Chih Hao ; Iriberri, Alicia ; Leroy, Gondy
Author_Institution
Sch. of Inf. Syst. & Technol., Claremont Grad. Univ., Claremont, CA
fYear
2008
Firstpage
193
Lastpage
198
Abstract
To solve crimes, investigators often rely on interviews with witnesses, victims, or criminals themselves. The interviews are transcribed and the pertinent data is contained in narrative form. To solve one crime, investigators may need to interview multiple people and then analyze the narrative reports. There are several difficulties with this process: interviewing people is time consuming, the interviews - sometimes conducted by multiple officers - need to be combined, and the resulting information may still be incomplete. For example, victims or witnesses are often too scared or embarrassed to report or prefer to remain anonymous. We are developing an online reporting system that combines natural language processing with insights from the cognitive interview approach to obtain more information from witnesses and victims. We report here on information extraction from police and witness narratives. We achieved high precision, 94% and 96% and recall, 85% and 90%, for both narrative types.
Keywords
information retrieval; natural language processing; police data processing; cognitive interview approach; crime information extraction; crime investigation; natural language processing; online reporting system; police-witness narrative report; Data mining; Drugs; Hidden Markov models; Information systems; Knowledge based systems; Machine learning; Natural language processing; Natural languages; Protection; Terrorism;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Technologies for Homeland Security, 2008 IEEE Conference on
Conference_Location
Waltham, MA
Print_ISBN
978-1-4244-1977-7
Electronic_ISBN
978-1-4244-1978-4
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/THS.2008.4534448
Filename
4534448
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