Uncategorized

Human Reviewers Can’t Keep Up With Police Bodycam Videos. AI Now Gets the Job

Tony Isaac shares a report from NPR: After a decade of explosive growth, body cameras are now standard-issue for most American police as they interact with the public. The vast majority of those millions of hours of video are never watched — it’s just not humanly possible. For academics who study the everyday actions of police, the videos are an ocean of untapped data. Some are now using ‘large language model’ AI’s — think ChatGPT — to digest that information and produce new insights. […] The research found the encounters were more likely to escalate when officers started the stop by giving orders, rather than reasons for the interaction. While academics are using AI from anonymized videos to understand larger processes, some police departments have started using it to help supervise individual officers — and even rate their performance. An AI system mentioned in the report, called TRULEO, assesses police officers’ behavior through automated transcriptions of body camera footage. It’ll evaluate both positive and negative conduct during interactions, such as traffic stops, and provide feedback to officers. In addition to flagging issues like swearing or abusive language, the AI can also recognize instances of professionalism.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Tony Isaac shares a report from NPR: After a decade of explosive growth, body cameras are now standard-issue for most American police as they interact with the public. The vast majority of those millions of hours of video are never watched — it’s just not humanly possible. For academics who study the everyday actions of police, the videos are an ocean of untapped data. Some are now using ‘large language model’ AI’s — think ChatGPT — to digest that information and produce new insights. […] The research found the encounters were more likely to escalate when officers started the stop by giving orders, rather than reasons for the interaction. While academics are using AI from anonymized videos to understand larger processes, some police departments have started using it to help supervise individual officers — and even rate their performance. An AI system mentioned in the report, called TRULEO, assesses police officers’ behavior through automated transcriptions of body camera footage. It’ll evaluate both positive and negative conduct during interactions, such as traffic stops, and provide feedback to officers. In addition to flagging issues like swearing or abusive language, the AI can also recognize instances of professionalism.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Read More 

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Scroll to top
Generated by Feedzy