Wang, Jing, Ho, Yufang, Xu, Zhijie, McIntyre, Dan and Lugea, Jane (2016) A Visualization Method for Understanding Forensic Statements. In: IEEE Information Visualization (InfoVis), 23rd-28th October 2016, Baltimore, Maryland, USA. (Unpublished)
Abstract

Forensic statements are lengthy and contain large amounts of complex information. Consequently, it is often difficult for readers of such reports to identify connections between disparate pieces of evidence and to properly and objectively assess their value to the case in question. Readers have no alternative but to rely on intuition and experience to make sense of the complex arguments and propositions arising from forensic evidence. This research investigates the opportunities in the convergence of linguistic approaches to extracting and reconstructing the cognitive structure, i.e. “TextWorlds”, in a statement, and the computerized operational settings for enabling effective and hopefully more accurate interpretation of forensic discourse through visualization. This will be of benefit to a wide range of stakeholders, including investigating officers, prosecuting and defence counsels, judges and jurors.

Information
Library
Documents
[img]
Preview
Poster.pdf

Download (9MB) | Preview
[img]
Preview
camera_ready.pdf

Download (214kB) | Preview
Statistics

Downloads

Downloads per month over past year

Downloads per month over past year for
"Poster.pdf"

Downloads per month over past year for
"camera_ready.pdf"

Add to AnyAdd to TwitterAdd to FacebookAdd to LinkedinAdd to PinterestAdd to Email