Abstract

A public safety answering point (PSAP) receives alerts and attends to emergencies that occur in its responsibility area. The analysis of the events related to a PSAP can give us relevant information in order to manage them and to improve the performance of the first response institutions (FRIs) associated to every PSAP. However, current emergency systems are growing dramatically in terms of information heterogeneity and the volume of attended requests. In this work, we propose a system for statistical, spatial, and temporal analysis of incidences registered in a PSAP by using simple, yet robust and compact, event representations. The selected and designed temporal analysis tools include seasonal representations and nonparametric confidence intervals (CIs), which dissociate the main seasonal components and the transients. The spatial analysis tools include a straightforward event location over Google Maps and the detection of heat zones by means of bidimensional geographic Parzen windows with automatic width control in terms of the scales and the number of events in the region of interest. Finally, statistical representations are used for jointly analyzing temporal and spatial data in terms of the “time–space slices”. We analyzed the total number of emergencies that were attended during 2014 by seven FRIs articulated in a PSAP at the Ecuadorian 911 Integrated Security Service. Characteristic weekly patterns were observed in institutions such as the police, health, and transit services, whereas annual patterns were observed in firefighter events. Spatial and spatiotemporal analysis showed some expected patterns together with nontrivial differences among different services, to be taken into account for resource management. The proposed analysis allows for a flexible analysis by combining statistical, spatial and temporal information, and it provides 911 service managers with useful and operative information.

Highlights

  • Since the 1950s, emergency services have been operating in North America mostly through a unique three-digit number (e.g., 911) for easy memorization, allowing anyone at anytime to contact a call-taker located in a public safety answering point (PSAP)

  • The information regarding any emergency contains a register with times associated to all the instances produced in the PSAP

  • We propose a system for temporal analysis, including seasonal representations and nonparametric

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Summary

Introduction

Since the 1950s, emergency services have been operating in North America mostly through a unique three-digit number (e.g., 911) for easy memorization, allowing anyone at anytime to contact a call-taker located in a public safety answering point (PSAP). It seems possible to increase the quality and efficiency of the stored-data analysis by combining statistical, spatial, and temporal information for a better understanding of the attended emergencies, for generating useful reports, and for improving resource management [6,7,8]. This analysis will increase the response capacity of the FRIs, optimizing available resources, shortening response times, and helping to plan the response to similar events in the future on the basis of the analysis of historical data [9].

Emergency Representation Model
Operation of a PSAP at ECU 911
Temporal Event Analysis
Geographical Event Analysis
Parzen Windows
Short-Scale Adjustment of the Parzen Width
Experiments and Results
Results of Temporal Analysis
Geographical and Spatiotemporal Analysis
Discussion and Conclusions
Full Text
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