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Online sexual predators may get caught by CATT

Online sexual predators may get caught by CATT
The algorithm is designed to alert police to chatroom conservations that might be leading to a face-to-face encounter
The algorithm is designed to alert police to chatroom conservations that might be leading to a face-to-face encounter
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The algorithm is designed to alert police to chatroom conservations that might be leading to a face-to-face encounter
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The algorithm is designed to alert police to chatroom conservations that might be leading to a face-to-face encounter

It's a sad fact that pedophiles often hang out in online chatrooms, looking to strike up conservations with unsuspecting children. In the worst cases, they arrange face-to-face meetings, resulting in sexual assault. A new algorithm, however, is designed to help keep that from happening.

Known as the Chat Analysis Triage Tool (CATT), the algorithm was created by a team from Indiana's Purdue University led by assistant professor Kathryn Seigfried-Spellar. It was developed by analyzing 4,353 messages in 107 chat sessions that involved subsequently-arrested sex offenders. More specifically, the researchers utilized a process known as statistical discourse analysis to identify different trends in word usage and conversation patterns.

Among other things, CATT is able to detect a tactic commonly used by offenders seeking a meeting, in which they first attempt to gain trust by disclosing something about themselves – this usually takes the form of a negative personal story, such as their being the victim of parental abuse.

Additionally, before suggesting a meeting, offenders often chat with the child for a period of weeks or even months, essentially "grooming" them. By contrast, pedophiles who are only interested in chatting typically quickly move on from child to child.

By detecting these factors and others, it is now hoped that CATT could be used to sort through the plethora of suspicious conversations in chatrooms, alerting police to ones that might be leading up to a real-world encounter. To that end, the university now plans to turn the tool over to several law enforcement departments for a test run – it could be in use by the end of the year.

"If we can identify language differences, then the tool can identify these differences in the chats in order to give a risk assessment and a probability that this person is going to attempt face-to-face contact with the victim," says Seigfried-Spellar. "That way, officers can begin to prioritize which cases they want to put resources toward to investigate more quickly."

A paper on the research is being published in the journal Child Abuse and Neglect.

Source: Purdue University

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