An Application of Natural Language Processing to Classify What Terrorists Say They Want

被引:5
作者
Bridgelall, Raj [1 ]
机构
[1] North Dakota State Univ, Coll Business, Dept Transportat Logist & Finance, Fargo, ND 58108 USA
来源
SOCIAL SCIENCES-BASEL | 2022年 / 11卷 / 01期
关键词
counterterrorism; machine learning; risk modeling; sustainable societies; text mining; PATTERNS;
D O I
10.3390/socsci11010023
中图分类号
C [社会科学总论];
学科分类号
03 ; 0303 ;
摘要
Knowing what perpetrators want can inform strategies to achieve safe, secure, and sustainable societies. To help advance the body of knowledge in counterterrorism, this research applied natural language processing and machine learning techniques to a comprehensive database of terrorism events. A specially designed empirical topic modeling technique provided a machine-aided human decision process to glean six categories of perpetrator aims from the motive text narrative. Subsequently, six different machine learning models validated the aim categories based on the accuracy of their association with a different narrative field, the event summary. The ROC-AUC scores of the classification ranged from 86% to 93%. The Extreme Gradient Boosting model provided the best predictive performance. The intelligence community can use the identified aim categories to help understand the incentive structure of terrorist groups and customize strategies for dealing with them.
引用
收藏
页数:15
相关论文
共 59 条
[1]   What terrorists really want [J].
Abrahms, Max .
INTERNATIONAL SECURITY, 2008, 32 (04) :78-+
[2]   What Terrorist Leaders Want: A Content Analysis of Terrorist Propaganda Videos [J].
Abrahms, Max ;
Beauchamp, Nicholas ;
Mroszczyk, Joseph .
STUDIES IN CONFLICT & TERRORISM, 2017, 40 (11) :899-916
[3]  
Aggarwal, 2015, Data Mining, DOI 10.1007/978- 3-319-14142-8
[4]  
[Anonymous], 2014, Internet, Policy Politics
[5]   Human values and ideological beliefs as predictors of attitudes toward immigrants across 20 countries: The country-level moderating role of threat [J].
Araujo, Rafaella de C. R. ;
Bobowik, Magdalena ;
Vilar, Roosevelt ;
Liu, James H. ;
Gil de Zuniga, Homero ;
Kus-Harbord, Larissa ;
Lebedeva, Nadezhda ;
Gouveia, Valdiney V. .
EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF SOCIAL PSYCHOLOGY, 2020, 50 (03) :534-546
[6]   On the human consequences of terrorism [J].
Arce, Daniel G. .
PUBLIC CHOICE, 2019, 178 (3-4) :371-396
[7]   Counterterrorism Evaluation and Citizens: More Than about Policing? [J].
Balestrini, Pierre Philippe .
SOCIAL SCIENCES-BASEL, 2021, 10 (08)
[8]   The tree of political violence: a GMERT analysis [J].
Bassetti, Thomas ;
Caruso, Raul ;
Schneider, Friedrich .
EMPIRICAL ECONOMICS, 2018, 54 (02) :839-850
[9]   Social Profiling: A Review, Taxonomy, and Challenges [J].
Bilal, Muhammad ;
Gani, Abdullah ;
Lali, Muhammad Ikram Ullah ;
Marjani, Mohsen ;
Malik, Nadia .
CYBERPSYCHOLOGY BEHAVIOR AND SOCIAL NETWORKING, 2019, 22 (07) :433-450
[10]  
Bjorgo Tore., 1993, RACIST VIOLENCE EURO, P29