Police officer’s first 45 words during traffic stops can predict if they’ll turn violent

bnew

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Police officer stopping the driver of a vehicle

(© Framestock - stock.adobe.com)
LAW ENFORCEMENT

Police officer’s first 45 words during traffic stops can predict if they’ll turn violent​

MAY 30, 2023



BLACKSBURG, Va. — The first 45 words police use during a traffic stop can often determine if the situation with the driver will escalate, a new study explains. Researchers from Virginia Tech say these first few seconds — particularly when police officers pull over Black drivers — are key in deciding if a normally routine stop turns into a potentially “life or death” incident.

They explain that their study of vehicle stops by law enforcement — which also analyzed events leading up to the death of George Floyd — highlights the importance of an officer’s first words to Black drivers in a stressful environment.

“We found that there’s a key difference in how officers talk to Black drivers during the first moments of stops that end in an arrest, handcuffing, or search versus those that don’t end in such outcomes,” says study lead author Eugenia Rho, who leads the Society, AI, and Language (SAIL) research lab at Virginia Tech. “Simply put, the officer starts off with a command rather than a reason in escalated stops.”

The study, published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, also finds that Black men could often tell how a traffic stop would play out simply by listening to those 45 words — which usually take about 30 seconds to say.

“There’s a clear linguistic signature to escalated vehicle stops. It was discerned by trained coders, computational language models, and perhaps most importantly, by Black male citizens,” Rho says in a university release.

police traffic stop
New York State Police Traffic Stop by dwightsghost is licensed under CC BY 2.0.
The research team examined audio recordings and transcripts from police officer body cameras during 577 traffic stops over the course of one month in what the scientists called a “medium-sized, racially diverse city.” The data included stops that ended in arrest, handcuffing, or searches and those that did not, but did not include any stops in which force was used.

The study authors say they focused on Black drivers because they were “disproportionately represented” by the police data.

“We limited the study to Black drivers because less than 1 percent of the escalated stops included non-Black drivers in our sample,” Rho continues. “We included both male and female drivers, but escalated stops were predominately male drivers.”

Rho adds that the data helped the team across two studies, one focusing on each officer’s language at the beginning of a traffic stop and a second looking at better understanding the perception of Black men when they hear the officer’s words. A third part of the new paper examined the first moments of the fatal incident involving George Floyd in May 2020.

‘Stops that end escalated, often start escalated’​

In the first study, researchers used computational linguistics and hand annotation to analyze the police transcripts. This helped the team identify “dialogue acts” such as greeting, commands, questions, reasons, and more.

“Dialog acts are like conversation road maps,” Rho continues. “They show not only what the speaker is trying to do – like ask a question or give an order – but also how that piece of conversation fits into the larger discussion, helping to guide what might be said next.”

Researchers also set controls to account for factors that could impact an officer’s language, such as the reason they pulled the driver over and the area’s crime rate.

“During vehicle stops, officers might ask for ID, explain why the driver was pulled over, or give a ticket. We were interested in how the balance of these dialog acts might differ between escalated and non-escalated stops,” the study author explains.

Results show traffic stops that escalated were almost three times more likely to start with the police officer issuing a command to the driver. These incidents were also two-and-a-half times less likely to start with the officer providing a reason for the stop.

“We found that stops that end escalated, often start escalated,” Rho reports.

police traffic stop
Maryland State Police Traffic Stop by Corde11 is licensed under CC BY-NC-SA 2.0.
In the second study, the VT researchers played the audio from the same traffic stops they examined in the first study to a group of 188 Black men — varying in age, region, education, and political affiliation. Each participant had to listen to 10 random traffic stops at random – five ending in escalation and five that did not– from the perspective of the driver. The participants then took a survey revealing how they felt about each stop and gave their predictions about how the stop ended.

Results show Black men appeared to use each officer’s language as their guide to whether they thought the stop would end with the driver being arrested or searched. The group predicted that 84 percent of stops that involved an officer giving orders with no reasons for the stop would escalate.

The participants also worried about the use of force in over 80 percent of the stops where police officers started by giving orders and not providing a reason for the stop — compared to only 47 percent of stops starting with the officer telling drivers why they pulled them over.

What happened during the George Floyd incident?​

After finding this unique “linguistic signature” among traffic stops, the researchers looked to see if the same signature was present when traffic stops ended with the use of force by police. The team examined the initial moments between Floyd and the officer who first approached him on May 25, 2020.

Within the first 30 seconds, the officer delivered 57 words during nine speech turns. All of them consisted of physical orders. Floyd, in his 11 speech turns, extended apologies to the police, asked for a reason for the stop, declared his innocence, expressed fear, and pleaded with the officer. However, Rho says each comment by Floyd was met with an order by the officer.

With more and more vehicle stops gaining national attention when officers use force, Rho says the team feels it’s important to better understand police-citizen interactions during more common vehicle stops.

“The most common way for the average citizen to encounter law enforcement is through vehicle stops,” Rho concludes. “So we really wanted to better understand how we can improve communication between officers and citizens during those encounters.”

“We want this study to really start conversations around how we can inform training around de-escalation practices for law enforcement and potentially a better understanding of how to facilitate relations between Black communities and law enforcement as well.”

South West News Service Stephen Beech contributed to this report.
 

DaPresident

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Well, yeah. Start any interaction yelling orders, and you can EASILY see how the interaction could escalate :what:

Then they wanna tell black people, to “just listen and don’t resist.” THEY start the whole ordeal out wrong and WE always have to be the bigger person and stay calm and relax in high pressure situations. It’s no wonder why we get shot/killed in these stops
 

King

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The overintellectualization and overanalyzing of simple common sense shyt is downright digusting.

The people that fund this bullshyt research really think they’re doing something :mjlol:

This shyt reminds me of how CACS used to measure slaves skulls and shyt to justify them having “low intelligence” worthy of a slave.

What the absolute fukk is this bullshyt supposed to accomplish?

“We want this study to really start conversations around how we can inform training around de-escalation practices for law enforcement and potentially a better understanding of how to facilitate relations between Black communities and law enforcement as well.”

As if these talks haven’t been occurring since the inception of slave catchers :comeon:

What’s next a metanalysis of how many seconds on average it takes for a police officer to choke the life of of a black man?

How about these liberal fukks spend money on weakening the national police union that was built off black subjugation?

FOH :camby:
 

bnew

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The overintellectualization and overanalyzing of simple common sense shyt is downright digusting.

The people that fund this bullshyt research really think they’re doing something :mjlol:

This shyt reminds me of how CACS used to measure slaves skulls and shyt to justify them having “low intelligence” worthy of a slave.

What the absolute fukk is this bullshyt supposed to accomplish?



As if these talks haven’t been occurring since the inception of slave catchers :comeon:

What’s next a metanalysis of how many seconds on average it takes for a police officer to choke the life of of a black man?

How about these liberal fukks spend money on weakening the national police union that was built off black subjugation?

FOH :camby:


why are you downplaying this? :mjpls:

Within the first 30 seconds, the officer delivered 57 words during nine speech turns. All of them consisted of physical orders. Floyd, in his 11 speech turns, extended apologies to the police, asked for a reason for the stop, declared his innocence, expressed fear, and pleaded with the officer. However, Rho says each comment by Floyd was met with an order by the officer.
 

In The Zone '98

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A Terry stop in the United States allows the police to briefly detain a person based on reasonable suspicion of involvement in criminal activity. Reasonable suspicion is a lower standard than probable cause which is needed for arrest.

Most important information for black drivers to understand is that when an officer asks you to get out of a car, you get out and let the traffic stop play out from there.

Protect yourself and the passengers in your vehicle.
 

Ezekiel 25:17

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The time I got pulled over for doing 93 in a 65 I didn't have any problems. Got a speeding ticket but the officer took away my license.

I think we need to differentiate those that comply and get shot and those that don't comply and get shot.
 

Ezekiel 25:17

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Most important information for black drivers to understand is that when an officer asks you to get out of a car, you get out and let the traffic stop play out from there.

Protect yourself and the passengers in your vehicle.

Nah I ain't getting out if I know I'm innocent.
 

lightskin jermaine

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The time I got pulled over for doing 93 in a 65 I didn't have any problems. Got a speeding ticket but the officer took away my license.

I think we need to differentiate those that comply and get shot and those that don't comply and get shot.
Gotta add in those that don't comply with unlawful commands. Cops will violate our rights if we let em.
 
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