Sentinel & Enterprise

Predicting danger

Algorithm claims to forecast crime in cities before it happens

- By Carrington York

A new computer algorithm can now forecast crime in a big city near you — apparently.

The algorithm, which was formulated by social scientists at the University of Chicago and touts 90% accuracy, divides cities into 1,000-square-foot tiles, according to a study published in Nature Human Behavior.

Researcher­s used historical data on violent crimes and property crimes from Chicago to test the model, which detects patterns over time in these tiled areas and tries to predict future events. It performed just as well using data from other big cities, including Atlanta, Los Angeles and Philadelph­ia, the study showed.

The new tool contrasts with previous models for prediction, which depict crime as emerging from “hotspots” that spread to surroundin­g areas. Such an approach tends to miss the complex social environmen­t of cities, as well as the nuanced relationsh­ip between crime and the effects of police enforcemen­t, thus leaving room for bias, according to the report.

“It is hard to argue that bias isn’t there when people sit down and determine which patterns they will look at to predict crime because these patterns, by themselves, don’t mean anything,” said Ishanu Chattopadh­yay, assistant professor of medicine at the University of Chicago and senior author of the study. “But now, you can ask the algorithm complex questions like: ‘ What happens to the rate of violent crime if property crimes go up?”

But Emily M. Bender, professor of linguistic­s at the University of Washington, said in a series of tweets that the focus should be on targeting underlying inequities rather than on predictive policing, while also noting that the research appears to ignore securities fraud or environmen­tal crimes.

And other crime prediction models previously used by law enforcers have been found to erroneousl­y target certain people based on a narrower set of factors. In 2012, the Chicago Police Department — along with academic researcher­s — implemente­d the “Crime and Victimizat­ion Risk Model” that produced a list of so- called strategic subjects, or potential victims and perpetrato­rs of shooting incidents determined by factors such as age and arrest history.

The model assigned a score that determined how urgently people on the list needed to be monitored, and a higher score meant they were more likely to be perceived as either a potential victim or perpetrato­r of a gun crime.

But after a lengthy legal battle, a Chicago Sun-times investigat­ion revealed in 2017 that nearly half of the people identified by the model as potential perpetrato­rs had never been charged with illegal gun possession, while 13% had never been charged with a serious offense. In contrast, the tool designed by Chattopadh­yay and his colleagues uses hundreds of thousands of sociologic­al patterns to figure out the risk of crime at a particular time and space.

The study, “Event-level Prediction of Urban Crime Reveals Signature of Enforcemen­t Bias in U. S. Cities,” was supported by the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency and the Neubauer Collegium for Culture and Society.

Researcher­s used historical data on violent crimes and property crimes from Chicago to test the model, which detects patterns over time ... and tries to predict future events.

 ?? TNS ?? A new computer algorithm developed by scientists at the University of Chicago can reportedly predict crime before it happens.
TNS A new computer algorithm developed by scientists at the University of Chicago can reportedly predict crime before it happens.

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