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Pour les autres auteurs qui s'appellent David Canter, voyez la page de désambigüisation.

David Canter (2) a été combiné avec David V. Canter.

12 oeuvres 359 utilisateurs 5 critiques

Œuvres de David Canter

Étiqueté

Partage des connaissances

Nom canonique
Canter, David
Nom légal
Canter, David Victor
Autres noms
Canter, David V.
Date de naissance
1944-01-05
Sexe
male
Nationalité
UK
Professions
psychologist

Membres

Critiques

 
Signalé
mahamalik | Sep 6, 2022 |
Very short, very boring. A longer book with case studies would be more effective and interesting.
 
Signalé
Helcura | Nov 11, 2010 |
This book covers some of the basic history and principles of Ivestigative Psychology. For anyone who has a psychology background, but has no knowledge on this topic this book is perfect. However, I felt this book didn't offer any new information. If the reader has read journal articles and done other research on this topic this book is much to elementary!
½
 
Signalé
drizzlegirl | 1 autre critique | Jul 5, 2009 |
Author David Canter, one of the pioneers of so-called geographic profiling of crime, details in Mapping Murder quite stirring cases of (mostly) serial crimes and how geographical profiling helped catch the perpetrator. The mathematical theory behind his geographical profiling is never explained in the book, but it may be some kind of kernel density modeling where each crime spot is convolved with a local kernel. Canter shows that the spot where the criminal dwell is usually the site with the highest density from the combined kernels. As such it is not really rocket science, but rather a simple useful technique that helps the police priotizing suspects. Canter has overseen one implementation of a program - Dragnet - to this kind of analysis and some of the figures in the book are probably output from the program. One chapter is lifted off a lecture he gave, and his speculations there seems a bit out of place compared to the rest of the book. The book is from 2003 and one of the cases Canter describes is the assasination of celebrity Jill Dando, the use of geographic profiling and the subsequent catch and conviction of a man. It is not updated on the latest twists in this case: the man appealed and was acquitted, and in 2009 a drunken Serb boasted about killing Dando. This case shows that geographic profiling does not give strong enough evidence for a conviction - rather it can only point to suspects whose involvement in the crime must be established by other means. In Dando's case the other means was gunshot residues, and that evidence was ruled unsafe in the court of appeal.… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
fnielsen | May 1, 2009 |

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Paul Williams Photographer
Ian Rankin Foreword
Peter Williams Cover photographer

Statistiques

Œuvres
12
Membres
359
Popularité
#66,805
Évaluation
½ 3.6
Critiques
5
ISBN
71
Langues
5

Tableaux et graphiques