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GEODATA DAYS 2024

#1 Wed 04 May 2005 20:27

RPREST
Invité

CrimeStat : analyse stat des localisations des incidents criminels

Bonjour,

CrimeStat : utilitaire d'analyse statistique des localisation des incidents
criminels.
C'est gratuit, compatible mapinfo alors ca doit forcement interesser
quelqu'un ici...

Bonne soiree,
RP.

http://www.ojp.usdoj.gov/nij/maps/

De : Richard Block [RBLOCK@texte-a-enlever.luc.edu]
Envoye : mercredi 4 mai 2005 15:50
A : Mapinfo
Objet : MI-L Fwd: [LEANALYST] CrimeStat III is now available

The new version of CrimeStat is  compatible with MapInfo and adds several
new features including a travel demand model.  As always, it is free.
Dick

Richard Block
Department of Sociology
Loyola University
6525 N Sheridan Rd.
Chicago IL 60626

De : leanalyst-bounces+rblock=luc.edu@texte-a-enlever.lists.leanalyst.info
[mailto:leanalyst-bounces+rblock=luc.edu@texte-a-enlever.lists.leanalyst.info]De la part
de Dr. Ned Levine
Envoye : mardi 3 mai 2005 15:26
A : leanalyst@texte-a-enlever.lists.leanalyst.info
Objet : [LEANALYST] CrimeStat III is now available

About CrimeStat III
CrimeStat is a spatial statistics program for the analysis of crime
incident locations, developed by Ned Levine & Associates under grant
2002-IJ-CX-0007 from the National Institute of Justice. The program is
Windows-based and interfaces with most desktop GIS programs. The program
provides supplemental statistical tools to aid law enforcement agencies and
criminal justice researchers in their crime mapping efforts. CrimeStat is
being used by many police departments around the country as well as by
criminal justice and other researchers. The new version is 3.0 (CrimeStat
III) and is available free of charge.
The program inputs incident locations (e.g., robbery locations) in
'dbf', 'shp', ASCII or ODBC-compliant formats using either spherical or
projected coordinates. It calculates various spatial statistics and writes
graphical objects to ArcViewR, ArcGISR, MapInfoR, Atlas*GIST, SurferR for
Windows, and ArcView Spatial AnalystR.
The statistics cover spatial description and distance analysis (for
describing the general spatial pattern of crimes), hot spot analysis (for
identifying concentrations of crashes), interpolation (for visualizing crime
concentrations over a large area), space-time analysis (for understanding
temporal and spatial interaction in offender behavior), and journey-to-crime
estimation (for estimating the likely residence location of a serial
offender). New in version 3.0 is a module for crime travel demand modeling,
widely used in transportation planning. It allows a crime analyst to model
crime trips over a metropolitan area and to make reasonable guesses at the
travel mode and likely routes taken.  It can also be used to model possible
interventions.
CrimeStat III is accompanied by sample data sets and a manual that
gives the background behind the statistics and examples. The manual was
fully re-written and also discusses applications of CrimeStat developed by
other analysts and researchers. The crime travel demand module is fully
documented with six new chapters and a chapter with case studies on Chicago
and Las Vegas by Richard Block and Dan Helms.
For more information on the features of CrimeStat III, see the MAPS
website:
http://www.ojp.usdoj.gov/nij/maps
Or the National Archive of Crime Justice Data site where the program and
documentation can be downloaded:
http://www.icpsr.umich.edu/CRIMESTAT

Ned Levine

 

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