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Intelligence and Security Informatics

First NSF/NIJ Symposium, ISI 2003, Tucson, AZ, USA, June 2-3, 2003, Proceedings

  • Conference proceedings
  • © 2003

Overview

Part of the book series: Lecture Notes in Computer Science (LNCS, volume 2665)

Included in the following conference series:

Conference proceedings info: ISI 2003.

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Table of contents (40 papers)

  1. Full Papers

    1. Data Management and Mining

    2. Deception Detection

    3. Analytical Techniques

    4. Visualization

    5. Knowledge Management and Adoption

    6. Collaborative Systems and Methodologies

Other volumes

  1. Intelligence and Security Informatics

Keywords

About this book

Since the tragic events of September 11, 2001, academics have been called on for possible contributions to research relating to national (and possibly internat- nal) security. As one of the original founding mandates of the National Science Foundation, mid- to long-term national security research in the areas of inf- mation technologies, organizational studies, and security-related public policy is critically needed. In a way similar to how medical and biological research has faced signi?cant information overload and yet also tremendous opportunities for new inno- tion, law enforcement, criminal analysis, and intelligence communities are facing the same challenge. We believe, similar to “medical informatics” and “bioinf- matics,” that there is a pressing need to develop the science of “intelligence and security informatics” – the study of the use and development of advanced information technologies, systems, algorithms and databases for national se- rity related applications,through an integrated technological,organizational,and policy-based approach. We believe active “intelligence and security informatics” research will help improve knowledge discovery and dissemination and enhance information s- ring and collaboration across law enforcement communities and among aca- mics, local, state, and federal agencies, and industry. Many existing computer and information science techniques need to be reexamined and adapted for - tional security applications. New insights from this unique domain could result in signi?cant breakthroughs in new data mining, visualization, knowledge - nagement, and information security techniques and systems.

Editors and Affiliations

  • Department of Management Information Systems, University of Arizona, Tucson, USA

    Hsinchun Chen, Daniel D. Zeng, Therani Madhusudan

  • Tucson Police Department, Tucson, USA

    Richard Miranda, Jenny Schroeder

  • School of Public Administration and Policy, University of Arizona, Tucson, USA

    Chris Demchak

Bibliographic Information

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