DocumentCode
2757109
Title
The distribution of event complexity in the British Columbia court system
Author
Brantingham, Patricia ; Brantingham, Paul ; Ghaseminejad, Amir H.
Author_Institution
Inst. for Canadian Urban Res. Studies, Simon Fraser Univ., Vancouver, BC, Canada
fYear
2011
fDate
10-12 July 2011
Firstpage
113
Lastpage
118
Abstract
This paper reports an exploratory research on the distribution of event complexity in the British Columbia court system. Analysis of event distribution shows that the frequency of events sharply decreases with the increase in the number of persons and counts. The most frequently observed type of event is the event that has one person involved with one count. The number of events observed sharply declines when we query for events with a larger number of people involved or more counts charged. It is found that the number of events observed exponentially decreases when more complex events comprising more counts are analyzed. The same exponential decrease is observed for events with two or more people. This means that, in general, the least complex events are the most frequently observed ones. The events with more than one person involved have a “mode” that is at two counts. A first approximation model for the distribution of the load on the system based on different levels of complexity is proposed. The proposed model can be used for and be evaluated by predicting the load distribution in the BC criminal court system.
Keywords
law administration; BC criminal court system; British Columbia court system; CourBC analytical svstem; event complexity distribution; load distribution; Complexity theory; Heating; Load modeling; charge; counts; courts; data mining; distribution; entity relationships; event; event complexity; persons;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Intelligence and Security Informatics (ISI), 2011 IEEE International Conference on
Conference_Location
Beijing
Print_ISBN
978-1-4577-0082-8
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/ISI.2011.5984060
Filename
5984060
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