| |||||||||||||
NetCrime 2017 : Symposium on the Structure and Mobility of Crime | |||||||||||||
Link: https://goo.gl/VpwATK | |||||||||||||
| |||||||||||||
Call For Papers | |||||||||||||
CALL FOR ABSTRACTS
NetCrime 2017 2nd Symposium on the Structure and Mobility of Crime, a NetSci2017 Satellite. June 20, 2017 - Indianapolis, Indiana, USA http://biocomplexlab.org/NetCrime https://twitter.com/netcrime NetCrime -------- We have never lived in a safer world! Despite the good news, crime is still prevalent in most large cities. In the USA, the FBI reports that in 2013 there were about 3,098 crimes per 100,000 habitants, with 2,730 of them being property crimes and 367 violent. Unveiling the structure and the dynamics of criminal activity can lead to a better understanding of crime as a whole which in turn can help us provide better cities to our citizens. The understanding of crime activity has for a long time puzzled government officials, law-enforcement officers, and researchers. Law enforcement tends to be reactive and many times a step behind criminal activity. What if we could change this “game”? What if we could give the police an edge by making them understand criminal structure and perhaps prevent some activity before it takes place? This event has been put together to bring researchers from various fields including, criminology, sociology, physics, computer science, mathematics, law-enforcement to an open forum to discuss the role of Network Science in understanding the structure and dynamics of crime. Dates ----- Submission deadline: March 3, 2017 Notification of acceptance: March 26, 2017 NetSci date: June 19 to 23, 2017 NetCrime date: June 20, 2017 (morning) Submission ---------- We invite submissions extended abstract (2 pages max) via EasyChair. https://easychair.org/conferences/?conf=netcrime2017 A non-exhaustive list of topics of interest include: - Understanding crime as a complex system; - criminal networks; - crime modeling; - dynamics and structure of transnational crime; - dynamics of criminal hotspots in cities; - dynamics of terrorist events; - crime prediction in cities; - spatial regularities of crime in cities; - use of social media for crime analysis; - dynamics of cyber-crime; - interplay of criminal events and social-economic factors; - use of communication data in criminal activity; - detection of criminal organization in cities - relationship between human mobility and crime; - visualization of illegal activities; - social network analysis in crime data - network-based tools for analyzing crime - visualization of criminal data in cities - and others. Submissions will be evaluated and selected by the Program Committee, based on the adherence to the workshop theme, originality and scientific quality. Once an abstract has been accepted, at least one author is required to attend the workshop and present the paper. Please note that the participants must register in the NetSci general conference. Keynote speakers ---------------- TO BE ANNOUNCED Program Committee ----------------- TO BE CONFIRMED Organizers ---------- - Marcos Oliveira, Florida Institute of Technology, USA - Ronaldo Menezes, Florida Institute of Technology, USA - Hugo Barbosa-Filho, University of Rochester, USA |
|