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      Language from police body camera footage shows racial disparities in officer respect

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          Abstract

          <p id="d2457115e259">Police officers speak significantly less respectfully to black than to white community members in everyday traffic stops, even after controlling for officer race, infraction severity, stop location, and stop outcome. This paper presents a systematic analysis of officer body-worn camera footage, using computational linguistic techniques to automatically measure the respect level that officers display to community members. This work demonstrates that body camera footage can be used as a rich source of data rather than merely archival evidence, and paves the way for developing powerful language-based tools for studying and potentially improving police–community relations. </p><p class="first" id="d2457115e262">Using footage from body-worn cameras, we analyze the respectfulness of police officer language toward white and black community members during routine traffic stops. We develop computational linguistic methods that extract levels of respect automatically from transcripts, informed by a thin-slicing study of participant ratings of officer utterances. We find that officers speak with consistently less respect toward black versus white community members, even after controlling for the race of the officer, the severity of the infraction, the location of the stop, and the outcome of the stop. Such disparities in common, everyday interactions between police and the communities they serve have important implications for procedural justice and the building of police–community trust. </p>

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          Most cited references19

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          The Stanford CoreNLP Natural Language Processing Toolkit

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            The Group Engagement Model: Procedural Justice, Social Identity, and Cooperative Behavior

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              Shaping Citizen Perceptions of Police Legitimacy: A Randomized Field Trial of Procedural Justice

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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
                Proc Natl Acad Sci USA
                Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
                0027-8424
                1091-6490
                June 20 2017
                June 20 2017
                : 114
                : 25
                : 6521-6526
                Article
                10.1073/pnas.1702413114
                5488942
                28584085
                3986d824-4b92-48c0-9363-4b866f62b791
                © 2017

                http://www.pnas.org/site/misc/userlicense.xhtml

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