Applying artificial intelligence to big data can
predict – and prevent – crime.
Warren Myers, CEO and co-founder of security
and medical response marketplace AURA
When a social media site throws out an ad for
a product you were just discussing over the phone, it’s easy to jump to
conclusions: They must be listening, surely.
But the truth is that the site employed
artificial intelligence (AI) to predict your behaviour. You searched for a
yeast starter last week and commented on a friend’s photo of sourdough bread
yesterday. The ad for a bread-making course that seemingly pops up out of the
blue was shown to you because the data predicted you might be interested in it
– based on your own and previous users’ behaviour.
Those same principles can be applied to fight
crime – and soon will.
From road accidents to riots
When it comes to crime, it’s not quite as
simple as scraping social media to find people who did successive searches for
‘crowbar’ and ‘balaclava’.
Data exists to predict, and thus prevent,
crime – it’s just not being analysed as yet.
There is a wealth of information to predict the
likelihood of crime. It spans from the obvious indicators – like a person’s
presence in a bad part of town – to the surprising, which includes weather
patterns and the days of the week.
A Finnish study, for example, showed that a
1°C increase in temperature results in a 1.7% increase in criminal activity –
based on two decades’ worth of data. Another study in the US proved
that vehicle theft spikes on weekends and in the evenings. And
science has even shown that when a local football team loses unexpectedly, domestic
violence incidents increase by 10%.
By collating all this data, and past crime
statistics, information from tipping lines, social media scraping, CCTV, and
more, crime can be predicted, and emergency services proactively dispatched
before it’s too late.
The principle can also be used to predict
spikes in traffic accidents and dispatch emergency services to nearby locations
for even faster response times. The artificial intelligence employed is
similar to Uber’s algorithms which predict when and where there will be a high
probability of ride requests so they can dispatch drivers proactively.
So, when it comes to riots, this principle is
the only practical answer. Riots – like the ones parts of South Africa was
subjected to recently – are one of the most difficult emergency incidents to
manage because they have such a staggering snowball effect.
History has shown that once a riot escalates
past a certain point, almost nothing can be done that won’t be to the detriment
of everyone involved. By predicting it, it can be prevented or contained in the
early stages.
Using AI proactively
At the moment, emergency services – from
ambulances to private security and police – largely operate on a reactive
basis. A call comes in, and a vehicle is dispatched to assist. As the country’s
crime and emergency statistics keep increasing, it’s clear that a proactive
approach is the answer.
And it will happen soon: Predictability
fuelled by AI and big data can reduce violent crimes by 25% as early as
2023.
Data engineers at AURA* are already working on
expanding its existing security and medical response algorithms, to become the
centre repository for risk data. Hundreds of informants will be employed to
operate on the ground and send information to the repository. Augmented with
pools of data collected from available and existing sources, this information
feeds into a so-called data lake, where AI is applied to create the
intelligence that can predict crime and other emergencies.
By combining the forces of AI, private and
public security, crime can be fought in a collective, coordinated, and
proactive way. Safety should be a basic human right, not a privilege. And now,
it can be.
*AURA
is currently South Africa’s leading security and medical response marketplace,
gathering and centralising data from over 170 private security companies before
applying AI to dispatch the closest vetted response vehicle to its +250,000
active users.
Photos by Pixabay
Article by Cover magazine