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July 15, 2005|Volume 33, Number 31|Six-Week Issue


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Sensors won't save lives from suicide
bombers, warns Yale expert

Sensors to detect suicide bombers before they can reach a target and detonate explosives would not substantially reduce deaths and injuries in urban settings, Yale researchers report in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

"Widespread deployment of suicide bomber detectors would at best save a few lives," says Edward H. Kaplan of Yale, who co-authored the study with Moshe Kress of the Naval Postgraduate School. "A more promising strategy is to invest available resources in gathering intelligence to intercept suicide bombers before they attack."

"The sensing devices currently available are very expensive and are not sensitive enough to justify widespread deployment," adds Kaplan, the William N. & Marie A. Beach Professor of Management Sciences at the School of Management, and a professor at the Institute of Social and Policy Studies and in the Department of Epidemiology and Public Health at the School of Medicine.

Kaplan and Kress, professor of operations research at the Naval Postgraduate School, studied the operational effectiveness of sensor-based detectors by modeling and comparing pedestrian suicide bombing attacks on random crowds in two urban settings -- a grid of city blocks and a large, open plaza. The team assessed the probability of detecting a bomber in a timely fashion and calculated the expected numbers of casualties that would result with and without intervention.

The researchers found that the sensors could detect attackers in a timely fashion, but such performance required a dense field of sensors capable of detecting attackers in at least 70% to 80% of the terrain. To translate detection into fewer casualties, intervention (fleeing, falling to the ground) must occur quickly. The team found that in some cases, intervention could modestly reduce casualties, but in other situations, interventions could create even more casualties, as people fleeing from a crowd tend to spread out and increase the probability of being exposed to bomb fragments.

In a previous study, Kaplan found that the most successful counter-tactic employed by Israel in combating suicide bombings was intelligence-driven arrests of terror operatives and suspects.

-- By Karen Peart


T H I SW E E K ' SS T O R I E S

Yale launches program to train urban teachers

New alumni fellow elected

Sensors won't save lives from suicide bombers, warns Yale expert

Study: Monkeys ape humans' economic traits

Richard Shaw departs for Stanford post

Tennis goes co-ed at this year's Pilot Pen

Yale co-sponsors 'City of Summer' concerts and films

Exhibit features post-Civil War works by 'artful storyteller'

Yale alumni, teachers win Tony Awards

ENDOWED PROFESSORSHIPS

Law School project exploring the information society . . .

Poll shows public's distaste with foreign oil dependence

Scientists discover how plants protect themselves from infection

Team seeking 'perfume' to control malaria-carrying mosquitoes

Geologists use ancient sea algae to trace CO2 levels of long ago

Study shows how sex discrimination in job hiring is able to endure

YSN study shows effectiveness of preschool health screenings

SCHOOL OF MEDICINE NEWS

Spotlight on Sports

Athletics archive now in library's collection

Three promoted to post of associate provost

Event to explore role of faith in the corporate world

In Memoriam: Dick Wittink, marketing expert and SOM teacher

Five faculty members awarded Guggenheim Fellowships for research

Event explored how libraries can benefit city schools

New alumni lauded for efforts to improve public schools

Yale Books in Brief

Campus Notes


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