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id  Vol-3194/paper28
wikidataid  Q117345072→Q117345072
title  Online News Event Extraction for Crime Analysis
pdfUrl  https://ceur-ws.org/Vol-3194/paper28.pdf
dblpUrl  https://dblp.org/rec/conf/sebd/RolloPB22
volume  Vol-3194→Vol-3194
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Online News Event Extraction for Crime Analysis

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Online News Event Extraction for Crime Analysis
Federica Rollo1 , Laura Po1 and Giovanni Bonisoli1
1
    “Enzo Ferrari" Engineering Department, University of Modena and Reggio Emilia, Via Vivarelli 10, Modena, Italy


                                         Abstract
                                         Event Extraction is a complex and interesting topic in Information Extraction that includes methods
                                         for the identification of event’s type, participants, location, and date from free text or web data. The
                                         result of event extraction systems can be used in several fields, such as online monitoring systems or
                                         decision support tools. In this paper, we introduce a framework that combines several techniques (lexical,
                                         semantic, machine learning, neural networks) to extract events from Italian news articles for crime
                                         analysis purposes. Furthermore, we concentrate to represent the extracted events in a Knowledge Graph.
                                         An evaluation on crimes in the province of Modena is reported.

                                         Keywords
                                         crime analysis, NLP, word embeddings, question answering, localization, deduplication


1. Introduction
In most recent years, the idea of Safe City is spreading. It is related to the strategies that aim to
help the government in the development of a city security system for reducing the possibility
of crime and providing an environment where people feel safe and comfortable [1]. A sound
analysis of the crime events distribution, i.e., detecting where and when crimes occur and
identifying the causes, is paramount to implement a Safe City. Crime analysis [2] is not merely
crime events counting; it is an in-depth examination of the different criminogenic factors (e.g.,
time, place, socio-demographics) that helps to understand why the crime occurs. It consists
of systematic, analytical processes for providing timely and pertinent information related to
crime patterns and trend correlations to assist the police in crime reduction, prevention, and
evaluation. Data-driven policing and associated crime analysis are still dawning. The use of
Geographic Information System (GIS) techniques in crime mapping helps crime analysis and
allows localizing crimes to identify the high-risk areas. Several countries provide statistics on
crime, but they are often available with some delay. The delay between the occurrence of the
event and the report publication can reach some days, months or even years. In most cases, they
are provided as aggregated data, not as single crime events. Moreover, police reports are usually
private documents, as in Italy. Therefore, although they are very useful documents, police
reports cannot be considered a possible source for timely crime analysis for citizens. The reports
of the Italian National Institute of Statistics (ISTAT) provide a clear picture of the types of crime
happen in each province during the year, however, the information provided is aggregated by
time and space and become available after (at least) one year from the crime event happening. In
those cases, newspapers are a valuable source of authentic and timely information. Extracting
crime events from news articles published on the web by local newspapers can help overcome

SEBD 2022: The 30th Italian Symposium on Advanced Database Systems, June 19-22, 2022, Tirrenia (PI), Italy
$ federica.rollo@unimore.it (F. Rollo); laura.po@unimore.it (L. Po); giovanni.bonisoli@unimore.it (G. Bonisoli)
� 0000-0002-3834-3629 (F. Rollo); 0000-0002-3345-176X (L. Po); 0000-0001-8538-8347 (G. Bonisoli)
                                       © 2022 Copyright for this paper by its authors. Use permitted under Creative Commons License Attribution 4.0 International (CC BY 4.0).
    CEUR
    Workshop
    Proceedings
                  http://ceur-ws.org
                  ISSN 1613-0073
                                       CEUR Workshop Proceedings (CEUR-WS.org)
�Figure 1: The pipeline of the Crime Analysis framework.

the lack of crime up-to-date information [3, 4, 5, 6, 7]. Detailed information about the crime
events can be extracted through Natural Language Processing (NLP) techniques applied to the
news articles’ text. Newspapers provide reliable, localized, and timely information (the time
delay between the occurrence of the event and the publication of the news does not exceed
24/48 hours). The main drawback is that newspapers do not collect and publish all the facts
related to crimes, but only the ones that arouse the readers’interest. Therefore, a percentage of
police reports will not be turned into news articles and is lost.
   The scope of this paper is to describe a framework to extract crime data from news articles,
enrich them with semantic information and provide useful visualization. The strategy employs
several techniques and extends a previous work [8]: crime categorization, named entity extrac-
tion, 5W+1H extraction, linked data mapping, geo-localization, time expression normalization,
entity linking and duplicate detection. The novelty of such a framework is the integration of
multiple techniques, previously used in different contexts, for solving various sub-problems into
a common framework for crime analysis. Moreover, the framework transforms texts contained
in news articles into a Crime knowledge graph that accurately describes and links the crimes.
The framework has been tested successfully on news articles related to the city of Modena.
However, it can be adapted to manage data of other cities or areas.
   The outline of the paper is the following: in Section 2 the pipeline of the framework is
presented, while Section 3 is devoted to the description of the use case in the province of
Modena. Finally, Section 4 depicts some conclusions.

2. Crime Analysis framework
The pipeline of the framework to extract semantic information related to an event starting
from news articles published on the web and alerts shared on social media consists of 8 phases.
The phases should be executed mainly in sequence for each news article (except for some
phases where the execution can be run in parallel); in any case, different news articles can be
processed in parallel. The entire process is executed periodically to extract the latest published
�news articles, analyze them and add information to the knowledge base (KB). The frequency of
execution depends on the need of having a real-time up-to-date KB and how often the selected
online newspapers publish news articles. Figure 1 illustrates the phases, in bold, and some
techniques and tools, in italic:
   1. Data extraction is performed by harvesting online newspapers and social media (web
      scraping). The content of each news article is labeled, structured and semantically anno-
      tated [9, 10]. Some web content may already expose a predefined structure, i.e., HTML
      pages encoded with the Document Object Model (DOM), and some libraries allow access-
      ing the data encapsulated into HTML tags;1 if this is not the case, other methods can be
      used, such as RSS Feed, API, and so on.
   2. The categorization of the event is crucial to map a news article w.r.t. a type of event (busi-
      ness, sports, crime, politics, arts, culture, etc.). Given some pre-categorized news articles,
      i.e., annotated training data, machine learning algorithms can be applied to uncategorized
      news articles to assign them a type of event [11, 12]. Word embeddings can be exploited
      to extract the vector representations of the news articles, then, classifiers can take in
      input such representations to assign a category to each news article. Moreover, active
      learning can be used to enhance the quality of categorization retraining the classification
      model on the original dataset enriched with high-confidence categorized news articles.
      Other approaches can exploit topic detection algorithms [13, 14].
   3. The identification and extraction of the 5W+1H (What, When, Where, Who, Why, How)
      might be performed by employing Event Extraction models or through the Question
      Answering task using BERT (Bidirectional Encoder Representations from Transformers)
      by adopting different questions according to the type of event [15, 16]. The 5W+1H are
      the questions that a reporter must answer through the reporting. Therefore, these are
      the essential elements of any news and also contribute to improve the value of news and
      newsworthiness in journalism.
   4. By analyzing the news article’s body, temporal expressions can be identified (for example,
      words like “two days ago”, “this morning”) and then normalized in date format. This
      operation allows identifying the exact date of the event, taking into account the date of
      publication.
   5. The Named Entity Extraction (NER) is applied to the text of the news articles to identify
      the reference to persons, organizations, places, and temporal expressions and can be
      executed in parallel with the second phase. Its results can intersect the output of the
      5W+1H phase.
   6. With the Entity Linking, the entities identified in phase 5, such as persons, organizations,
      and locations are linked to resources (URI) available in Linked Datasets. For example,
      DBpedia Spotlight [17] can be used to link to resources of DBpedia and Linked Geo Data.
      Besides, an Italian version of Blink2 [18] can be used to link entities to Wikipedia or to
      populate a new KB with entities not linked to external resources.
   7. The geographical localization exploits the entities that have been identified as locations
      in phase 5 or as answers to “where” in phase 3 and processes them to be geo-referenced.
   1
       An example is the Java HTML Parser named jsoup.
   2
       https://github.com/rpo19/BLINK
�      In case a location is not specified in the news article, organizations (identified in phase 4)
      can also be exploited to geolocate the event.
   8. The identification of duplicates or storylines aims to find the same event described in
      more news articles, this might occur also within the same newspaper where updates
      about one event are published over time. To avoid too many comparisons among news, it
      is possible to identify candidate duplicates and apply text similarity analysis methodology
      to these candidates. In the end, the information of duplicates can be merged.
   The use of semantic technologies is a key point in the presented approach for detecting events
from news articles and enriching them with information automatically extracted from the text.

3. Crime Knowledge Graph for Modena
The Crime Analysis framework has been applied to a collection of news articles related to the
crimes that occurred in the province of Modena. We select two major newspapers that publish
on average 850 news articles per year related to crimes in the Modena province and cover the
95% of the total news articles published in Modena newspapers. The framework collected 17,500
reports from June 2011 to December 2021 (approximately 10 years) and is currently running
to analyze news articles published every day by two local newspapers. On 17,500 reports, the
framework was able to geolocalize almost 100% of the crime events and normalize the time
expressions on 83% of the news articles. The results produced allow performing crime mapping
studies and the identification of crime hot spots in semi real-time: visualizations of these results
are shown through the “Modena Crime” web application.3
   Figure 2 shows an example of Knowledge Graph generation, geo-localization and duplicate
detection of an Italian news article reporting a theft. The news article is derived from the
translation from Italian to English of the news taken from the “Gazzetta di Modena” newspaper.4
The 5W+1H are extracted from the text and reported in the event-centric Knowledge Graph. The
central node (the one colored in red in Figure 2) identifies the event, while the other nodes report
information related to the 5W+1H. The time reference (“last Thursday”) and the publication
date (“12 March 2022”) are used to identify the date of the event, while the entities categorized
as locations are exploited by OSM Nominatim to find the GPS coordinates where the theft
occurred. Then, the coordinates are used to represent the event on the map. Thanks to the
duplicate detection algorithm, two news articles are identified as duplicates of the examined
news article. They are follow-up news since they report updates on the theft. The publication
date is used to build the storyline of the event.
   We created a Crime Knowledge Graph for 1246 thefts that occurred in Modena in 2020 using
the Neo4j tool. An analysis of the interconnections between the crimes has been conducted
using centrality algorithms that determine, on the basis of the graph topology, the importance of
the individual nodes, and community detection algorithms to distinguish groups of nodes within
the overall graph. Each crime event can share some connected nodes with other events, such as
the place where the theft happened or the stolen objects, etc. We added direct relationships
among the crime nodes to represent that they share some connected nodes. Using Pagerank,
we classified the crime nodes based on their importance in the graph. The higher the Pagerank
    3
        https://dbgroup.ing.unimo.it/modenacrime
    4
        https://shorturl.at/vKSX2
�Figure 2: Example of news article with the corresponding knowledge graph, the geo-localization and
the timeline with the duplicates.

value of a node, the greater the connections of the event node with the other event nodes. For
example, thefts in which gold and valuables are stolen occur more frequently, and therefore
events reporting such stolen items are strongly connected. To detect the communities, we used
the label propagation algorithm on 5 different subgraphs obtained by examining the 5W+1H
relationships separately. For the Where subgraph, the result highlighted communities of nodes
sharing several locations, i.e., WHERE nodes. These first experiments provide some insights on
how Crime Analysis can benefit from graph-based methods.




Figure 3: Distribution of crime reports from 2016 to 2020 in the province of Modena.
�3.1. Impact and scalability
To evaluate the impact of the proposed framework, the number of crimes collected by the
framework and the number of crimes published in the official report of ISTAT (i.e., the crimes
reported to the police) have been compared. The report related to the period from 2016 to
20205 has been taken into account. The information is only quantitative, the types of crime
are reported per province and no information about where and when, during the year, the
crime happened is provided. For providing a comparison between the two datasets, only the
crime categories in common have been taken into account. Unfortunately, a location-based
comparison is not possible because ISTAT provides a unique report for the entire province.
With the total number of crimes in the city of Modena of 9590 from 2016 to 2020, the built KB
covers around 10% of the crimes reported by ISTAT. A hypothesis on this low coverage can be
attributed to the fact that not all the criminal events recorded by ISTAT, and therefore in the
police reports, are of high impact and public interest. Therefore, not all of them are reported in
local news articles. The most frequent crimes in both datasets are thefts each year from 2016 to
2020. Figure 3 shows the total number of the top three types of crimes recorded in the report
of ISTAT and compared to the number collected by the framework. As can be seen, the lower
coverage is reported in scams and frauds (the percentage is between 2% and 5% each year),
while the higher one is in robbery (up to 50% in 2020).
   Even if the approach has been applied in a medium area, it highlights its potentiality. In
Italy, it is not possible to collect real-time crime information from official sources, since official
criminal statistics are reported annually with a delay of 6 months. The proposed approach can
be applied everywhere, also in small or medium cities/areas, since there will be always one or
more newspapers that report the main crimes to happen in that place.
   A first scalability test has been executed to ingest all the news articles related to crimes that
happened in the entire Emilia-Romagna region. Other 9 newspapers which publish news related
to the 9 provinces of the Emilia-Romagna region were selected. All the available news articles,
from 2011 till now, which refer to 11 crime types have been collected. The total number of news
articles is 35,000 (on average 3,900 news articles for each province). The crime ingestion can
be run in parallel for different newspapers and different crime types. Therefore, 99 ingestion
processes have been executed in parallel to extract, analyze and store data of the region. The
total loading time, which depends on the loading time of the province with the higher number
of news articles from 2011, is 3 hours for 35,000 news articles.6

4. Conclusion and Future Work
The framework presented in this paper is able to extract crime data from news articles, enrich
them with semantic information and provide a Knowledge Graph that can be exploited for
further analysis. It suggests multiple techniques for solving various sub-problems: extracting
crime events from news articles, geo-locating them, linking entities to Linked Data resources,
and detecting duplicates. The framework has been successfully employed in the province of
Modena and has allowed collecting a consistent dataset of more than 17,500 news articles about

    5
    http://dati.istat.it/Index.aspx?QueryId=25097&lang=en
    6
    The test has been performed on a Microsoft Windows 10 Pro, 16GB RAM, Processor Intel(R) Core(TM) i7-8750H
CPU @ 2.20GHz, 2208 Mhz, 6 Cores, 12 Logical Processors.
�13 types of crimes. A comparison with the official crime reports provided by ISTAT unveil that
this approach has allowed collecting about 10% of the crime events. This can be considered a
satisfactory result since we are aware that news articles do not cover all the crimes that happen
in a city. The approach is domain-independent; it can be applied to any kind of news article,
not only crime news, and can also be adapted to other languages.
   In future work, we will work on the definition of a crime ontology to describe the crime
events. In addition, Neo4j will be deepened to better analyze the Crime Knowledge Graph.

Acknowledgments
This work is partially supported by the project “Deep Learning for Urban Event Extraction from
News and Social media streams” founded by the Engineering Department “Enzo Ferrari” of the
University of Modena and Reggio Emilia.

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