On a certain day in the United States, up to 2,000 cases of missing person are reported. At the beginning, in these precious first minutes, are critical. Search efforts, which are normally coordinated between several agencies and volunteers, can easily go wrong, since they may not have any access to relevant, comprehensive guidelines on site in order to carry out lost people.
Here we come in: The Directorate for Science and Technology of the Department of Homeland Security and Technology works with DBS Productions – S&T partner in search and rescue research, publications and training – to develop tools that carry out decades of historical, geographical and statistical search data in the fingers of seekers.
Close Dr. Angela Ervin from S&T on and on
BOB Koester from DBS Productions on January 25th at 2 p.m. EST for a Facebook Live -Tech lecture on the Losse -Söe -Suite from Sar -Resources, including:- Mobile app behavior of the lost person:
This app for Apple iTunes, Google Play and Amazon for download for Apple iTunes, Google Play and Amazon offers step-by-step search instructions, investigative questions and behavioral profiles for more than 41 subject types for missing people inlay, children and dementia patients. It also identifies areas with a high probability in which a person can be found and has filters for eco -region and terrain. - Find software:
Integrated mapping, GIS, addiction theory and incident management in order to predict the likely places of missing topics. If you find, suggests the best commitment of teams, follow the staff and manage search instructions. As soon as a team fulfills, the software updates all relevant information using GPS tracks and addiction theory. - Search and rescue analysis tool (victim):
The web-identified data recording tool at the end of a search for a missing person and an analysis tool for many search queries. The data is automatically collected from Find and in Sarcat so that search manager or incident commander can print out detailed incident reports.
The interview is streamed live via S&T's Facebook account and welcome your questions and comments. Make up to us and ask your questions about this resource on January 25th at 2 p.m.
Comments are closed.