UK to deploy AI for cracking criminal cases

A new system will perform the tedious part of a crime analyst's job in seconds

Press Trust of India  |  London 

Artificial Intelligence

Move over, have developed a new system that can help solve crimes by taking over the laborious task of analysing clues and finding links that human investigators might have missed.

The system, called (Visual Analytics for Sense- Making in Criminal Intelligence), will be able to perform the tedious part of a crime analyst's job in seconds, freeing them to focus on finer points of a case.



"Everyone thinks policing is about connecting the dots, but that is the easy bit," said William Wong, who leads the project at Middlesex University London.

"The hard part is working out which dots need to be connected," Wong said.

scans millions of police records, interviews, pictures, videos and more, to identify connections.

"An analyst can then say whether this is relevant or not and will adjust the results," said Neesha Kodagoda, also from Middlesex.

The system uses machine learning to improve its searches on the basis of such interactions with analysts, the 'New Scientist' reported.

When an unsolved crime lands on an analyst's desk, one of the first things they have to do is search police databases for incidents that could be related based on their location, time or modus operandi, and collect details of all of the people involved.

A lot of the information recorded in police reports is in side notes and descriptions, but the algorithms powering can understand what is written - at a basic level.

Police in the UK are currently testing with three years' worth of real, anonymised data, totalling around 6.5 million records.

UK to deploy AI for cracking criminal cases

A new system will perform the tedious part of a crime analyst's job in seconds

A new system will perform the tedious part of a crime analyst's job in seconds Move over, have developed a new system that can help solve crimes by taking over the laborious task of analysing clues and finding links that human investigators might have missed.

The system, called (Visual Analytics for Sense- Making in Criminal Intelligence), will be able to perform the tedious part of a crime analyst's job in seconds, freeing them to focus on finer points of a case.

"Everyone thinks policing is about connecting the dots, but that is the easy bit," said William Wong, who leads the project at Middlesex University London.

"The hard part is working out which dots need to be connected," Wong said.

scans millions of police records, interviews, pictures, videos and more, to identify connections.

"An analyst can then say whether this is relevant or not and will adjust the results," said Neesha Kodagoda, also from Middlesex.

The system uses machine learning to improve its searches on the basis of such interactions with analysts, the 'New Scientist' reported.

When an unsolved crime lands on an analyst's desk, one of the first things they have to do is search police databases for incidents that could be related based on their location, time or modus operandi, and collect details of all of the people involved.

A lot of the information recorded in police reports is in side notes and descriptions, but the algorithms powering can understand what is written - at a basic level.

Police in the UK are currently testing with three years' worth of real, anonymised data, totalling around 6.5 million records.
image
Business Standard
177 22