Analytic provenance as constructs of behavioural markers for externalizing thinking processes in criminal intelligence analysis

Book chapter


Islam, J., Wong, B. and Xu, K. 2018. Analytic provenance as constructs of behavioural markers for externalizing thinking processes in criminal intelligence analysis. in: Leventakis, G. and Haberfeld, M. (ed.) Community-Oriented Policing and Technological Innovations Springer. pp. 95-105
Chapter titleAnalytic provenance as constructs of behavioural markers for externalizing thinking processes in criminal intelligence analysis
AuthorsIslam, J., Wong, B. and Xu, K.
Abstract

Studying how analysts use interaction in visualization systems is an important part of evaluating how well these interactions support analysis needs, like generating insights or performing tasks. Analytic Provenance commonly known as interaction histories contains information about the sequence of choices that analysts make when exploring data or performing a task. This research work presents a compositional reductionist approach as a way of externalizing analyst’s thinking processes by using markers of analytical behaviour extracted from such interaction histories. Set of Behavioural Markers (BMs) have been identified through a workshop with domain experts and a systematic literature review to use them as cognitive attributes of imagination, insight, transparency, fluidity and rigour to enhance performance in criminal intelligence analysis. A low level semantic action sequence computation also has been proposed as a detection approach of identified BMs and found from computation that BMs can act as bridge between human cognition and computation through semantic interaction. This research work has addressed problems of existing qualitative experiments to extract these BMs through cognitive task analysis and found that the proposed computational technique can be a supplementary approach for validating experimental results.

LanguageEnglish
Page range95-105
Book titleCommunity-Oriented Policing and Technological Innovations
EditorsLeventakis, G. and Haberfeld, M.
PublisherSpringer
SeriesSpringerBriefs in Criminology
ISBN
Hardcover9783319892931
Electronic9783319892948
Publication dates
Online27 Apr 2018
Print20 May 2018
Publication process dates
Deposited30 Apr 2018
Output statusPublished
Publisher's version
License
Additional information

Series Print ISSN: 2192-8533. Series Online ISSN: 2192-8541

Digital Object Identifier (DOI)https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-89294-8_10
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https://repository.mdx.ac.uk/item/87q09

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