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Measuring and Modeling Repeat and Near-Repeat Burglary Effects

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TLDR
A mathematical framework aimed at analyzing repeat and near-repeat effects in crime data is developed, which model repeat victimization as a series of random events, the likelihood of which changes each time an offense occurs.
Abstract
We develop a mathematical framework aimed at analyzing repeat and near-repeat effects in crime data. Parsing burglary data from Long Beach, CA according to different counting methods, we determine the probability distribution functions for the time interval τ between repeat offenses. We then compare these observed distributions to theoretically derived distributions in which the repeat effects are due solely to persistent risk heterogeneity. We find that risk heterogeneity alone cannot explain the observed distributions, while a form of event dependence (boosts) can. Using this information, we model repeat victimization as a series of random events, the likelihood of which changes each time an offense occurs. We are able to estimate typical time scales for repeat burglary events in Long Beach by fitting our data to this model. Computer simulations of this model using these observed parameters agree with the empirical data.

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Self-Exciting Point Process Modeling of Crime

TL;DR: The implementation of self-exciting point process models in the context of urban crime is illustrated using residential burglary data provided by the Los Angeles Police Department to gain insight into the form of the space–time triggering function and temporal trends in the background rate of burglary.
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Randomized Controlled Field Trials of Predictive Policing

TL;DR: In this article, the authors report results of two randomized controlled trials of near real-time epidemic-type aftershock sequence (ETAS) crime forecasting, one trial within three divisions of the Los Angeles Police Department and the other trial within two divisions of Kent Police Department (United Kingdom).
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Dissipation and displacement of hotspots in reaction-diffusion models of crime

TL;DR: In this article, the authors present a mathematical framework based on reaction-diffusion partial differential equations for studying the dynamics of crime hotspots, which is based on empirical evidence for how offenders move and mix with potential victims or targets.
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Statistical physics of crime: a review.

TL;DR: In this article, the authors review different approaches aimed at modeling and improving our understanding of crime, focusing on the nucleation of crime hotspots using partial differential equations, self-exciting point process and agent-based modeling, adversarial evolutionary games, and network science behind the formation of gangs and large-scale organized crime.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

A statistical model of criminal behavior

TL;DR: This work focuses on a two-dimensional lattice model for residential burglary, where each site is characterized by a dynamic attractiveness variable, and where each criminal is represented as a random walker.
Journal ArticleDOI

Infectious Burglaries. A Test of the Near Repeat Hypothesis

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors explored one aspect of spatial dependence for the offence of burglary, utilising epidemiological methods for the study of infectious diseases to investigate the phenomenon of near repeat victimization.
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