Mathematical Criminology and Security
Videos from BIRS Workshop
P. Jeffrey Brantingham, UCLA Department of Anthropology
Monday Mar 18, 2019 09:40 - 10:14
The Structure of Criminological Theory
Patricia Brantingham, Simon Fraser University
Monday Mar 18, 2019 10:15 - 10:44
Patterns in Crime: An Overview
Jonathan Ward, University of Leeds
Monday Mar 18, 2019 11:19 - 11:54
Agent-based models and data assimilation
Craig Gilmour, University of Strathclyde
Monday Mar 18, 2019 11:57 - 12:13
Self-Exciting Point Processes for Crime
Michael Porter, University of Virginia
Tuesday Mar 19, 2019 09:58 - 10:32
Spatial event hotspot prediction using multivariate Hawkes features
Yao Xie, Georgia Institute of Technology
Tuesday Mar 19, 2019 11:07 - 11:38
Scanning statistics for crime linkage detection
Naratip Santitissadeekorn, University of Surrey
Tuesday Mar 19, 2019 11:39 - 12:12
Approximate filtering of intensity process for Poisson count data
George Mohler, Indiana University–Purdue University Indianapolis
Wednesday Mar 20, 2019 09:32 - 10:07
Predicting crime is easy, using crime predictions is hard
Hao Li, UCLA
Wednesday Mar 20, 2019 10:09 - 10:42
Uncertainty Quantification for Semi-Supervised Multi-class Classification in Ego-Motion Analysis of Body-Worn Videos
Chunyi Gai, Dalhousie
Wednesday Mar 20, 2019 11:49 - 12:18
Existence and stability of spike solution in SIRS model with diffusion
Toby Davies, University College London
Thursday Mar 21, 2019 09:32 - 10:08
Street networks and their role in crime modelling
Wen-Hao Chiang, Indiana University
Thursday Mar 21, 2019 10:09 - 10:36
Multi-armed bandit problem on rescue resource allocation