Scaling laws in the dynamics of crime growth rate

Abstract

The increasing number of crimes in areas with large concentrations of people have made cities one of the main sources of violence. Understanding characteristics of how crime rate expands and its relations with the cities size goes beyond an academic question, being a central issue for contemporary society. Here, we characterize and analyze quantitative aspects of murders in the period from 1980 to 2009 in Brazilian cities. We find that the distribution of the annual, biannual and triannual logarithmic homicide growth rates exhibit the same functional form for distinct scales, that is, a scale invariant behavior. We also identify asymptotic power-law decay relations between the standard deviations of these three growth rates and the initial size. Further, we discuss similarities with complex organizations.

Publication
Physica A 392, 2672
Luiz G. A. Alves
Luiz G. A. Alves
Senior Data Scientist

I’m a Senior Data Scientist at Morningstar, Inc. My current research interest are in Deep Learning, Machine Learning, and Natural Language Processing.

Related