Thursday, October 2, 2008

GHC08: Fighting Crime using Gunshot Location Systems

This is a very interesting talk on the ShotSpotter technology by Elecia White and Sarah Newman. This technology has been installed in several major cities, helping to solve crimes when the shooter can be pinpointed quickly. In one example, a sniper shot someone from a roof, and actually stayed on the roof, relaxing and smoking a cigarette - thinking he was out of the expected shooting area. But, the ShotSpotter technology had pinpointed him and the police were able to make an arrest.

Of course, this technology needs to attempt to differentiate between firecrackers, hammers, backfiring cars and gunshots. The technology takes a first pass at guessing what it was hearing (and gives a level of confidence), but then asks the police dispatcher to make a judgment call on whether police action is required or not.

They find this gets faster and better reporting than actually relying on people calling 911 (as there is a longer delay before they call and only about 50% of gun crimes are called in). The system isn't perfect, but seems that it can definitely help!

Valerie Fenwick

(this entry originally appeared, with links on Valerie's personal blog)

2 comments:

  1. I have seen this technology in action- it works. I am so confident in it I bid for and won the contract to export it here to the UK where I hope it will deter, prevent and detect gun crime. Geoff Locke Director GunShotLocating Ltd

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  2. Hi. James from ShotSpotter here. The good Dr. Berger (the founding scientist of Safety Dynamics, by the way, who posted comments over on the original posting), isn't quite providing the full story. Our systems *do* detect far more fireworks than gunfire, but SHOTSPOTTER SYSTEMS AUTOMATICALLY DIFFERENTIATE FIREWORKS FROM GUNFIRE. Thus saying that the system has an 86% false positive rate is misleading: the system identifies both gunfire and fireworks *and tells the police which are which*. (On that June weekend--right before July 4th, as you will notice--there simply were many more fireworks set off than gunfire in the City. Detecting each one and telling police it is a firework does not constitute a false positive; the fireworks are a fact of the community. We don't blindly report all of them; we differentiate them!)

    Are we always correct? No, not always. There is an error rate, but it's substantially less than 20% of detected incidents, and often less than 10%. (Right now, York Commissioner Whitman says we are detecting 94% of the known gunfire in the City, and additionally that 2/3 of the incidents we detect aren't reported to 911.) But the chance that there's a machine classification error is why we also return the audio of that actual incident so that dispatchers can review any questionable incidents and provide additional intelligence. Over time, we re-train the algorithms which classify gunfire and fireworks on a city-by-city basis, using the dispatcher's feedback (and our own expertise) to improve ongoing performance. Also, this audio is used for forensic analysis. Just last week, for example, our audio data was played to a jury in a criminal trial of two defendants, one of whom claimed he didn't have a gun. The jury heard the two guns for themselves, and we were able to plot each location and prove how far apart the two defendants were standing (thus proving it wasn't one defendant holding two guns).

    (Why detect fireworks in the first place? Because people call 911 about them all the time, usually thinking they are gunfire, and by providing information about such incidents to police dispatchers, they can *avoid* diverting precious resources to deal with fireworks. Just last night, for example, I watched five fireworks incidents come in to an East Coast system, all of which were correctly identified as fireworks by ShotSpotter automatically, and any one of which could otherwise have been a waste of officer's time had someone called them in to 911 as gunfire.)

    The article Dr. Berger is referring to actually provides a nicely balanced picture, and I recommend it for those who want the facts: http://www.inyork.com/ci_9822975?IADID=Search-www.inyork.com-www.inyork.com

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