. GPS News .




.
GPS NEWS
GIS Technology Offers New Predictive Analysis to Business
by Staff Writers
Aurora CO (SPX) Mar 21, 2012

A growing number of police departments around the country find that they can use the techniques to identify "discernable geospatial preferences associated with a perpetrator's conscious and unconscious activities leading up to criminal behavior, a gang action, or a terrorist threat."

It isn't often that managers can look to law enforcement for clues on how to more effectively do their work. But police are delivering an important lesson on the use of geographic information systems (GIS) by utilizing geospatial predictive analysis to find meth labs before criminals establish them.

Researchers Max Lu and Jessica Burnum have described how methamphetamine labs in the city of Colorado Springs between 2002 and 2005 didn't pop up in a random distribution. Rather, their positions are clustered "in neighborhoods with a young and predominantly white population, small household size and low education levels."

What the researchers did was correlate socioeconomic data with the locations of seized labs and sites of toxic byproducts of the chemical processes that create meth.

They used basic geospatial predictive modeling theory: Things don't happen in random patterns in the world. Instead, various environmental factors come into place. Or they may be socioeconomic, like the data Lu and Burnum used and could also represent other factors, such as geography or various elements of infrastructure.

Law enforcement's use of geospatial analytics has moved far beyond a couple of researchers or the fictional exploits of the television show Numb3rs.

A growing number of police departments around the country find that they can use the techniques to identify "discernable geospatial preferences associated with a perpetrator's conscious and unconscious activities leading up to criminal behavior, a gang action, or a terrorist threat."

It's statistical prediction of the future based on associating relevant factors-sometimes thousands of types of measurement-with geography. Experts sift through past crimes and the characteristics of the places they occurred.

The result isn't a giant arrow pointing to the guilty party. Rather, geospatial predictive analysis gives other locations where similar crimes might likely take place.

Geospatial Predictive Analysis Applied in Business
Applying geospatial predictive analysis to business uses the same fundamental concepts.

Instead of crimes and the people that commit them, a company looks for things relevant to its business strategy: customers, neighborhoods where marketing campaigns were particularly effective, areas that a competitor is relatively strong, locations for new retail outlets, parts of a supply chain that have problems that could disrupt the flow of goods.

Companies can use the techniques to identify situations that aren't directly related to their businesses, but that could adversely affect them.

"GIS-skilled technicians are prepared to create, manipulate, edit and present representations of geospatial information to an often non-technical audience to solve problems and overcome business challenges," says Devon Cancilla, Ph.D., dean, business and technology at American Sentinel University.

It takes little wondering to see how predicting areas that see terrorist activity, political instability, labor strikes, transportation disruptions and the like can help a company plan for potential disruptions.

"Geospatial predictive analysis is just another reason why managers should advance their knowledge of GIS and failing to do so might give a critical advantage to competitors who adopt it," says Dr. Cancilla.

American Sentinel University's GIS degree programs prepare students to analyze, interpret and effectively communicate spatially based data to a wide audience.

From the professional user of geospatial data to the common consumer of mainstream media, American Sentinel's B.S. GIS program provides the tools necessary to prevent complex concepts as meaningful and useful information for business and consumer solutions.

Related Links
American Sentinel University
GPS Applications, Technology and Suppliers




.
.
Get Our Free Newsletters Via Email
...
Buy Advertising Editorial Enquiries






.

. Comment on this article via your Facebook, Yahoo, AOL, Hotmail login.

Share this article via these popular social media networks
del.icio.usdel.icio.us DiggDigg RedditReddit GoogleGoogle



GPS NEWS
Navigation devices in market woes
New York (UPI) Mar 14, 2012
Personal navigating device makers are shifting strategies as they face increasing competition from increasingly capable mobile apps, U.S. analysts say. Companies like Tom Tom and Garmin are scrambling to hold on in a market expected to decline more than 40 percent by 2016, they say. "Most smartphones now come embedded with free navigation applications such as Google Maps," Lim Sh ... read more


GPS NEWS
Research reveals carbon footprint caused by China's irrigation system

New antibiotic could make food safer and cows healthier

Fertilization by invasive species threatens nutrient-poor ecosystems

Carrefour forced to shut China outlet over expired meats

GPS NEWS
Solitary waves induce waveguide that can split light beams

Designer lights from the physics lab

Inner workings of magnets may lead to faster computers

Silicon-carbon electrodes snap, swell, don't pop

GPS NEWS
Aviation driving growth in Latin America

A biplane to break the sound barrier

HK backs third runway despite environmental fears

Next supersonic plane might be a biplane

GPS NEWS
Three-cylinder cars coming to U.S.

Space foil helping to build safer cars

Hydrogen power in real life: clean and energy efficient

The "twilight zone" of traffic costs lives at stoplight intersections

GPS NEWS
HP merges computer and printer units

Japan logs surprise February trade surplus

Taiwan opens swathes of economy to China firms

BHP sees iron ore demand 'flattening'

GPS NEWS
European grasslands challenge rainforests as the most species-rich spaces on Earth

Mesquite trees displacing Southwestern grasslands

Tennessee's Urban Forests Valued in the Billions

Report Shows Forest Growth in North Outpacing Other Parts of Country

GPS NEWS
Spotting ancient sites, from space

Google opens Amazon wilds to armchair explorers

Satellite images identify early human settlements

Investigation of Earth Catastrophes From the ISS: Uragan Program

GPS NEWS
3D-Printer with Nano-Precision

Nano spiral staircases modify light

Are silver nanoparticles harmful?

HyperSolar Discloses Development Plan for Breakthrough Renewable Hydrogen and Natural Gas Technology


Memory Foam Mattress Review

Newsletters :: SpaceDaily Express :: SpaceWar Express :: TerraDaily Express :: Energy Daily
XML Feeds :: Space News :: Earth News :: War News :: Solar Energy News

.

The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2012 - Space Media Network. AFP, UPI and IANS news wire stories are copyright Agence France-Presse, United Press International and Indo-Asia News Service. ESA Portal Reports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additional copyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement,agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by Space Media Network on any Web page published or hosted by Space Media Network. Privacy Statement