1. Incorporating space and time into random forest models for analyzing geospatial patterns of drug-related crime incidents in a major U.S. metropolitan area
- Author
-
Kathleen Stewart, Zhiyue Xia, and Junchuan Fan
- Subjects
Driving factors ,Geospatial analysis ,Process (engineering) ,Ecological Modeling ,Geography, Planning and Development ,Autocorrelation ,0211 other engineering and technologies ,021107 urban & regional planning ,02 engineering and technology ,computer.software_genre ,Metropolitan area ,Data science ,Article ,Random forest ,Urban Studies ,Geography ,Drug-related crime ,computer ,Built environment ,021101 geological & geomatics engineering ,General Environmental Science - Abstract
The opioid crisis has hit American cities hard, and research on spatial and temporal patterns of drug-related activities including detecting and predicting clusters of crime incidents involving particular types of drugs is useful for distinguishing hot zones where drugs are present that in turn can further provide a basis for assessing and providing related treatment services. In this study, we investigated spatiotemporal patterns of more than 52,000 reported incidents of drug-related crime at block group granularity in Chicago, IL between 2016 and 2019. We applied a space-time analysis framework and machine learning approaches to build a model using training data that identified whether certain locations and built environment and sociodemographic factors were correlated with drug-related crime incident patterns, and establish the top contributing factors that underlaid the trends. Space and time, together with multiple driving factors, were incorporated into a random forest model to analyze these changing patterns. We accommodated both spatial and temporal autocorrelation in the model learning process to assist with capturing the changes over time and tested the capabilities of the space-time random forest model by predicting drug-related activity hot zones. We focused particularly on crime incidents that involved heroin and synthetic drugs as these have been key drug types that have highly impacted cities during the opioid crisis in the U.S.
- Published
- 2021