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VoiceYourView: mapping public confidence in policing

Research output: Contribution to conference - Without ISBN/ISSN Conference paperpeer-review

Published

Standard

VoiceYourView: mapping public confidence in policing. / Nasa, Baseerit; Binner, Jane; Simm, William et al.
2010. Paper presented at Horizon Digital Futures 2010, United Kingdom.

Research output: Contribution to conference - Without ISBN/ISSN Conference paperpeer-review

Harvard

Nasa, B, Binner, J, Simm, W, Ferrario, MA, Whittle, J, Lam, BC & Zhao, Z 2010, 'VoiceYourView: mapping public confidence in policing', Paper presented at Horizon Digital Futures 2010, United Kingdom, 11/10/10 - 12/10/10. <https://www.horizon.ac.uk/images/stories/f48-Nasa.pdf>

APA

Nasa, B., Binner, J., Simm, W., Ferrario, M. A., Whittle, J., Lam, B. C., & Zhao, Z. (2010). VoiceYourView: mapping public confidence in policing. Paper presented at Horizon Digital Futures 2010, United Kingdom. https://www.horizon.ac.uk/images/stories/f48-Nasa.pdf

Vancouver

Nasa B, Binner J, Simm W, Ferrario MA, Whittle J, Lam BC et al.. VoiceYourView: mapping public confidence in policing. 2010. Paper presented at Horizon Digital Futures 2010, United Kingdom.

Author

Nasa, Baseerit ; Binner, Jane ; Simm, William et al. / VoiceYourView : mapping public confidence in policing. Paper presented at Horizon Digital Futures 2010, United Kingdom.

Bibtex

@conference{1acda1d6422b4ece925e02c4f66a9035,
title = "VoiceYourView: mapping public confidence in policing",
abstract = "Voice Your View (vYv) is a RCUK Digital Economy-funded project that investigates how digital technologies can be applied in public spaces to make them safer. vYv is developing a range of mobile and static devices that allow the public to voice their opinions and concerns on their environment as and when thoughts occur to them. As a simple example, a jogger might feel unsafe in his/her local park due to lack of lighting. Rather than go home and write a letter to the local council – a strategy which would likely end up with the observation being forgotten – the jogger can simply document his/her concern using a vYv mobile phone application. Crucially, vYv is developing and applying advanced natural language processing algorithms to filter, structure and make sense of the potentially vast amount of textual comments received using the system. An early trial of vYv in Lancaster had 600 users [1]; results on automatically analyzing the textual comments from these users showed that vYv identified an acceptable theme in a comment 78% of the time [2]. This paper applies the vYv text analysis engine to qualitative questionnaire responses from a Derry District Policing Partnership (DDPP) survey carried out on public confidence and satisfaction with policing in Derry in 2009. The aim of the study was to investigate the feasibility of creating public perception maps automatically – that is, given a large number of textual commentaries (such as those produced by vYv) expressing people{\textquoteright}s perceptions of their environment, how feasible is it to automatically extract the meaning of the comments and plot them on maps? These so-called public perception maps will capture the {\textquoteleft}buzz{\textquoteright} of public feeling at a given snapshot in time, and can potentially be updated in real-time as new comments arrive. ",
author = "Baseerit Nasa and Jane Binner and William Simm and Ferrario, {Maria Angela} and Jon Whittle and Lam, {Barbara C.} and Zhen Zhao",
year = "2010",
language = "English",
note = "Horizon Digital Futures 2010 ; Conference date: 11-10-2010 Through 12-10-2010",

}

RIS

TY - CONF

T1 - VoiceYourView

T2 - Horizon Digital Futures 2010

AU - Nasa, Baseerit

AU - Binner, Jane

AU - Simm, William

AU - Ferrario, Maria Angela

AU - Whittle, Jon

AU - Lam, Barbara C.

AU - Zhao, Zhen

PY - 2010

Y1 - 2010

N2 - Voice Your View (vYv) is a RCUK Digital Economy-funded project that investigates how digital technologies can be applied in public spaces to make them safer. vYv is developing a range of mobile and static devices that allow the public to voice their opinions and concerns on their environment as and when thoughts occur to them. As a simple example, a jogger might feel unsafe in his/her local park due to lack of lighting. Rather than go home and write a letter to the local council – a strategy which would likely end up with the observation being forgotten – the jogger can simply document his/her concern using a vYv mobile phone application. Crucially, vYv is developing and applying advanced natural language processing algorithms to filter, structure and make sense of the potentially vast amount of textual comments received using the system. An early trial of vYv in Lancaster had 600 users [1]; results on automatically analyzing the textual comments from these users showed that vYv identified an acceptable theme in a comment 78% of the time [2]. This paper applies the vYv text analysis engine to qualitative questionnaire responses from a Derry District Policing Partnership (DDPP) survey carried out on public confidence and satisfaction with policing in Derry in 2009. The aim of the study was to investigate the feasibility of creating public perception maps automatically – that is, given a large number of textual commentaries (such as those produced by vYv) expressing people’s perceptions of their environment, how feasible is it to automatically extract the meaning of the comments and plot them on maps? These so-called public perception maps will capture the ‘buzz’ of public feeling at a given snapshot in time, and can potentially be updated in real-time as new comments arrive.

AB - Voice Your View (vYv) is a RCUK Digital Economy-funded project that investigates how digital technologies can be applied in public spaces to make them safer. vYv is developing a range of mobile and static devices that allow the public to voice their opinions and concerns on their environment as and when thoughts occur to them. As a simple example, a jogger might feel unsafe in his/her local park due to lack of lighting. Rather than go home and write a letter to the local council – a strategy which would likely end up with the observation being forgotten – the jogger can simply document his/her concern using a vYv mobile phone application. Crucially, vYv is developing and applying advanced natural language processing algorithms to filter, structure and make sense of the potentially vast amount of textual comments received using the system. An early trial of vYv in Lancaster had 600 users [1]; results on automatically analyzing the textual comments from these users showed that vYv identified an acceptable theme in a comment 78% of the time [2]. This paper applies the vYv text analysis engine to qualitative questionnaire responses from a Derry District Policing Partnership (DDPP) survey carried out on public confidence and satisfaction with policing in Derry in 2009. The aim of the study was to investigate the feasibility of creating public perception maps automatically – that is, given a large number of textual commentaries (such as those produced by vYv) expressing people’s perceptions of their environment, how feasible is it to automatically extract the meaning of the comments and plot them on maps? These so-called public perception maps will capture the ‘buzz’ of public feeling at a given snapshot in time, and can potentially be updated in real-time as new comments arrive.

M3 - Conference paper

Y2 - 11 October 2010 through 12 October 2010

ER -