Leveraging body-camera footage to analyze police training impact

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A study used body-worn camera footage as a source of data on police-community interactions. Nicholas Camp and colleagues analyzed transcripts from 615 police stops made in California by Oakland Police Department police officers before and after a procedural justice training, which focused on officer communication in routine traffic stops. The training included findings by the authors in a previous study that showed officers used more respectful language with White drivers than with Black drivers during traffic stops.

The training recommended that officers:

  1. begin a stop by greeting the driver and introducing themselves;
  2. explicitly state the legal justification for the stop early in the encounter;
  3. express concern for the driver’s safety;
  4. reassure the driver;
  5. and use formal titles when addressing the driver.

Using a combination of automatic detection and trained coders, the authors found that the training led to a statistically significant increase in the number of these communication techniques used. Post-training stops were twice as likely to use all five techniques than pre-training stops. Trends were broadly similar across all races of drivers.

According to the authors, the study serves as an example of how body camera footage can be used as a source of data to study and evaluate changes in policing behaviors. The study is published in PNAS Nexus.

More information:
Leveraging body-worn camera footage to assess the effects of training on officer communication during traffic stops, PNAS Nexus (2024). academic.oup.com/pnasnexus/art … 93/pnasnexus/pgae359

Citation:
Leveraging body-camera footage to analyze police training impact (2024, September 17)
retrieved 17 September 2024
from https://phys.org/news/2024-09-leveraging-body-camera-footage-police.html

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