A team of researchers has used machine learning to predict and explain terrorist attacks.
Their tests suggest the models canaccurately predict attacks in regions that are already affected by terrorism. However, they foundthat “black swan events,” which occur sporadically, are almost impossible to predict.
The researchers, led by Dr Andre Python from Zhejiang University in China,used publicly available data to analyze the location and data ofattacks that occurred between 2002 and 2016 in 13 regions of the world.
“Wedefine terrorism as politically motivated attacks outside legitimate warfare (i.e., targeting noncombatants) perpetrated by non-state actors to communicate to a wider audience,” the group wrote in their study paper.
Predictive models were built for each of the individual regions. The algorithms incorporated numerous variables that could make them targets for attacks, from proximity to international borders to population density.
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The team said their models canproduce interpretable and accurate predictions of attacks a week ahead in areas with fairly high levels of terrorism.
The results showed how the probabilityof an attack changes over time.In regions strongly affected by terrorism, such as Southeast Asia, the risk of a terrorist event peaked roughly 200 weeks after a previous attack. In areas with a lower terrorism prevalence, such as Russia and Eastern Europe, the risk continued to increase until around 400 weeks.
Per the study paper:
This finding highlights that terrorists do indeed tend to target the same locations multiple times. The reasons for this can be manifold, but in general, it seems that these locations reflect the strategic equilibrium between reachability (i.e., cost for attacking for the terrorists) and the strategic value (i.e., benefits of an attack) of a location.
The team also found that the probability of terrorism tends to be negatively associated with population density:
[This] suggests that the probability of a terrorist attack is higher in less populated areas. Since the urban centers can be seen as more attractive targets, the results may indicate that access to these areas is an important constraint faced by terrorists.
You can read the open-access study paper in thejournalScience Advances.
This story is adapted from the Neural newsletter. You can subscribe to itright here.
Story byThomas Macaulay
Thomas is a senior reporter at TNW. He covers European tech, with a focus on AI, cybersecurity, and government policy.Thomas is a senior reporter at TNW. He covers European tech, with a focus on AI, cybersecurity, and government policy.
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