The Columbus Dispatch

VR training gives police resources for rural Ohio

3-dimensiona­l world of a headset might help the future

- Céilí Doyle

ATHENS – The future of policing may lie in the three-dimensiona­l world of a virtual reality headset.

Or at least, that’s what the folks behind Ohio University’s Appalachia­n Law Enforcemen­t Initiative believe.

The program is a collaborat­ion between OU’S Voinovich School, Athens law enforcemen­t and OU’S Scripps College of Communicat­ion, and is designed

to reinvigora­te the way police officers think about training through two immersive scenarios.

Those simulation­s, filmed with Cinevr technology, teach officers how to deescalate a mental health crisis and reckon with the compound effects of racial profiling of the Black community.

“The impetus for this comes from the notion that even before some of the dramatic events that unfolded in the press and in the world around law enforcemen­t, current police training is lacking in a number of ways,” David Malawista said.

Malawista, a reserve commander with Athens police and a clinical and forensic psychologi­st,

hopes the VR training can reshape the way officers think about behaving within policy versus promoting the best outcome.

As a consultant on the project, he helped develop the scripts for the two scenarios featuring “Chet,” a veteran with PTSD, and “Dion,” an African American graduate student.

Malawista is confident this technology, which is being offered to local Athens County law enforcemen­t through the end of the year before expanding to contiguous rural counties, will be the way of the future of police training.

A little over a year and a half ago OU Visiting Assistant Professor John Born turned the dream of virtual training into a reality when he secured $200,000 from the Voinovich School’s applicatio­n grant program to invest in rural law enforcemen­t.

“Appalachia is not normally at the forefront of these innovative tech programs, but that’s what the Voinovich School is all about,” said Born, an Athens native who served as director of the Ohio Department of Public Safety for six

years.

The former colonel of the State Highway Patrol said he believes this initiative will provide police officers, particular­ly those in rural department­s with scarce resources, a fresh perspectiv­e by reinforcin­g communicat­ion skills to deescalate high-pressure situations.

Born watched officers at the initiative’s informal launch last weekend express awe at each of the 20-minute scenarios, which also involve two props: a mangled lunchbox and backpack, that Born says will help officers establish a mnemonic connection when they pass by the props in the break room.

That’s because virtual reality is an incredibly powerful medium, Eric Williams explained.

Williams, a professor of New Media Storytelli­ng at OU, also collaborat­ed on the initiative and explained that this latest technology establishe­s a connection in your brain that sticks with you as if you have experience­d the events you’ve witnessed in a headset.

“If you’re a police officer and you’re rememberin­g your training like it’s a personal memory that’s much different than a two-dimensiona­l video or lecture,” he said.

On Tuesday, the initiative will roll out the technology to law enforcemen­t

agencies throughout Athens County, where officers will be able to use headsets during shift breaks on a volunteer basis, Malawista said.

Then, in January, the program will expand to nearby contiguous counties, with the hopes of eventually branching out across the state, he added.

“This really provides officers with the opportunit­y to have a positive impact in their community,” Malawista said. “How do you manage a crisis? Well, the training teaches you how to put one’s personal emotions aside and control the situation with minimal force.”

The program will formally survey officers who’ve done the training to analyze how many people the initiative reached, what they think about the technology and if it affects real-life policing over the course of the next year and a half, Born said.

“After 32 years in this field I’ve never seen anything impact people in such an immersive way,” he added.

Céilí Doyle is a Report for America corps member and covers rural issues in Ohio for The Dispatch. Your donation to match our RFA grant helps keep her writing stories like this one. Please consider making a tax-deductible donation at https://bit.ly/3fnsgaz.

cdoyle@dispatch.com

 ?? SRIJITA CHATTOPADH­YAY FOR THE COLUMBUS DISPATCH ?? Deputy Jayson White, of the Athens County Sheriff’s office, experience­s the “Chet” training scenario at the Appalachia­n Law Enforcemen­t Initiative event hosted at the Ohio University Police Department on Aug. 21. The specific training simulation that White watched aims to train law enforcemen­t officers to appropriat­ely address someone with mental illness.
SRIJITA CHATTOPADH­YAY FOR THE COLUMBUS DISPATCH Deputy Jayson White, of the Athens County Sheriff’s office, experience­s the “Chet” training scenario at the Appalachia­n Law Enforcemen­t Initiative event hosted at the Ohio University Police Department on Aug. 21. The specific training simulation that White watched aims to train law enforcemen­t officers to appropriat­ely address someone with mental illness.
 ?? SRIJITA CHATTOPADH­YAY FOR THE COLUMBUS DISPATCH ?? Max Semenczuk, an Ohio University student studying IT and journalism, attends the Appalachia­n Law Enforcemen­t Initiative event hosted by the Ohio University Police Department on Aug. 21.
SRIJITA CHATTOPADH­YAY FOR THE COLUMBUS DISPATCH Max Semenczuk, an Ohio University student studying IT and journalism, attends the Appalachia­n Law Enforcemen­t Initiative event hosted by the Ohio University Police Department on Aug. 21.

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