3 research outputs found
Datastore Design for Analysis of Police Broadcast Audio at Scale
With policing coming under greater scrutiny in recent years, researchers have
begun to more thoroughly study the effects of contact between police and
minority communities. Despite data archives of hundreds of thousands of
recorded Broadcast Police Communications (BPC) being openly available to the
public, a closer look at a large-scale analysis of the language of policing has
remained largely unexplored. While this research is critical in understanding a
"pre-reflective" notion of policing, the large quantity of data presents
numerous challenges in its organization and analysis.
In this paper, we describe preliminary work towards enabling Speech Emotion
Recognition (SER) in an analysis of the Chicago Police Department's (CPD) BPC
by demonstrating the pipelined creation of a datastore to enable a multimodal
analysis of composed raw audio files
Association between unemployment rates and prescription drug utilization in the United States, 2007–2010
Abstract Background While extensive evidence suggests that the economic recession has had far reaching effects on many economic sectors, little is known regarding its impact on prescription drug utilization. The purpose of this study is to describe the association between state-level unemployment rates and retail sales of seven therapeutic classes (statins, antidepressants, antipsychotics, angiotensin-converting enzyme [ACE] inhibitors, opiates, phosphodiesterase [PDE] inhibitors and oral contraceptives) in the United States. Methods Using a retrospective mixed ecological design, we examined retail prescription sales using IMS Health Xponentâ„¢ from September 2007 through July 2010, and we used the Bureau of Labor Statistics to derive population-based rates and mixed-effects modeling with state-level controls to examine the association between unemployment and utilization. Our main outcome measure was state-level utilization per 100,000 people for each class. Results Monthly unemployment levels and rates of use of each class varied substantially across the states. There were no statistically significant associations between use of ACE inhibitors or SSRIs/SNRIs and average unemployment in analyses across states, while for opioids and PDE inhibitors there were small statistically significant direct associations, and for the remaining classes inverse associations. Analyses using each state as its own control collectively exhibited statistically significant positive associations between increases in unemployment and prescription drug utilization for five of seven areas examined. This relationship was greatest for statins (on average, a 4% increase in utilization per 1% increased unemployment) and PDE inhibitors (3% increase in utilization per 1% increased unemployment), and lower for oral contraceptives and atypical antipsychotics. Conclusion We found no evidence of an association between increasing unemployment and decreasing prescription utilization, suggesting that any effects of the recent economic recession have been mitigated by other market forces.</p