Azavea’s Hunchlab – Or maybe call it “Geospatial Alert Lab”


Last week I took part in a live demo of Azavea’s Hunchlab product for crime analysis.  Azavea’s Jeremy Heffner does a great job with demo and discussion in the Hunchlab webinars.  


But I was confused for awhile by the product name and misled by the idea of a “hunch” in police detective TV shows.  But it finally sank in, like this:

Where is the “hunch”?

Hunchlab has three components: 

  • Crime Analysis = crime event mapping by checking layers on/off.
  • Early Warning  = get alerts for deviations from normal crime levels.
  • Forecasting    =  spatio-temporal analysis to show likelihood of, or deviation from, repeating patterns in neighborhoods of space and time.

The “hunch work” is in the Early Warning component, which is what interested me the most.


I have a hunch about what alerts I want

Hunchlab’s Early Warning tool can send alerts to users when crime levels deviate from statistical norms, or when they exceed a defined threshold in a specific geographic neighborhood.  It gives the user a well-designed dashboard for adjusting parameters to get the alerts just right.   So that alert emails arrive often enough, but not too often.  That is, the alert threshold is not too high and not too low.  Or the statistical window is not to wide or too narrow.




Call it “Geospatial Alert Lab”?  Probably not.


So I think I would call this part of Hunchlab a very interesting “Geospatial Alert Lab” with great potential in many fields.   Then I’d try to wire it up to other live data feeds besides crime — like earthquakes, land and sea temperature readings, wind speed and direction readings, mortgage foreclosures, maritime vessel tracking.  Maybe even road traffic.

But “Geospatial Alert Lab” probably wouldn’t sell.  They say 2012 is the year we drop “geospatial” from the marketing literature and erase “GIS” from the user interface.


Hunchlab:  Crime Analysis


Hunchlab:  Near Repeat Pattern


Hunch:  Load Forecasting


Configuring things out with GIS

I’m exploring a variety of approaches for mapping history and tourism resources for the Choptank, and to build web and mobile services based on geographic information systems (GIS).  I’m working this not from a software developer’s position (I’m not a qualified programmer) but as one of a species which Esri’s Derek Law calls “configurators”.  I take advantage of GIS software platforms that enable subject matter experts to create maps and geographic services.  Without hard-core programming,  but with something related — applications configuring or lightweight scripting.

Here is a list of GIS-based resources that I’ve used recently, or that I plan to experiment with:

  • Esri
    • ArcGIS Explorer Online
    • ArcGIS Explorer Desktop
    • ArcGIS.com community mapping
    • ArcGIS Viewer for Flex
    • REST-based map services via ArcGIS Server
  • Google
    • My Maps
    • Google Mapmaker
    • Google Earth
  • BatchGeo
    • Geocoding data in Excel tables

Please comment on your favorite GIS resources for non-programmers.