Social networking for terrorists
A new approach to analyzing social networks, reported in the current issue of the International Journal of Services Sciences, could help homeland security find the covert connections between the people behind terrorist attacks. The approach involves revealing the nodes that act as hubs in a terrorist network and tracing back to individual planners and perpetrators. Dr Yoshiharu Maeno, Founder Management Consultant of the Social Design Group and Dr Yukio Ohsawa, Associate Professor at the School of Engineering, University of Tokyo, Japan, explain that their analytical approach to understanding terrorist networks could ultimately help prevent future attacks.
Terrorist attacks can cause significant loss of life, have intense social and environmental impacts, and large economic losses. Maeno and Ohsawa explain that responding to a terrorist attack is akin to dealing with a natural disaster, with one important difference. Disaster recovery management is required with both, but in the case of a terrorist attack there is the added pressure of short-term responses to the terrorists themselves and in the long-term the need to identify and weaken the covert foundation underpinning an organized attack.
The team explains that by combining the prior understanding of expert investigators with graph theory and computational data processing, it should be possible to analyze a terrorist network and reveal latent connections and patterns. The researchers have carried out such an analysis of the network responsible for the 9/11 attacks in 2001 in order to evaluate the performance of their approach.
Fundamentally, their technique is a mathematical one involving "node" discovery. The nodes of a network are the hubs at which different members of the network are connected. Usually, ordinary members have one or two connections, nodes can have several and the critical nodes, the hubs, have many more.
The scheme is analogous to the structure of the world-wide web where individual web pages may have one or two connections, small organizations may have a few more. Major hubs, such as the big search engine companies, such as Google and Yahoo, news sources like CNN and the BBC, and social media networks such as Facebook and MySpace have many, many more. These big nodes act as the hubs through which individual and smaller sites are interconnected.
The team's computational analysis of the terrorist network associated with the 9/11 attacks revealed nodes that were not apparent to security experts in advance of the attacks. Such latent nodes appear to have been critical to the attacks but superficially do not appear to be particularly important individuals acting as hubs.
The analysis revealed a connection not known in advance of 9/11 between Waleed Alshehri and Mohand Alshehri, who share a name but are unrelated, which indicated the existence of Mustafa Ahmed Al-Hisawi as an important individual in the network.
In retrospect the connections seem obvious, but they were not seen initially, but the Japanese team's analysis could have unearthed them much sooner. Mohand Alshehri helped Mohammed Atta hijack the AA11 and fly it into the North Tower of the World Trade Center. Mohand Alshehri hijacked the AA175 and flew it into the South Tower of the World Trade Center. Waleed Alshehri had six links and is, the researchers demonstrate, the keystone person.
Having such network insights sooner rather than later would allow investigators to gather information on associates, friends, and relatives of a suspect terrorist and so bring the perpetrators to justice that much sooner or perhaps even unravel a network plotting future attacks.
"If the investigators had had a warning information on the 19 hijack planners (including WA and MA) before 9/11, our analysis could have aided the investigators in quickly understanding the complete picture of the organized attack including the covert foundation (like MAAH)," Yoshiharu says, "I am not sure, however, whether even a very quick investigators' understanding and action could have prevented the attack. Our analysis seems more suitable to satisfying the long-term need than the short-term need."
Source: Inderscience Publishers
Related
- Less is more in the fight against terrorismFri, 17 Sep 2010, 10:16:43 EDT
- Facebook (and systems biologists) take note: Network analysis reveals true connectionsMon, 7 Dec 2009, 15:26:02 EST
- Emergency online communitiesThu, 4 Mar 2010, 10:16:59 EST
- Sustainability solutions need the power of networksMon, 21 Feb 2011, 10:33:03 EST
- New malware could steal users social media behavior and info -- Ben-Gurion U. researchersThu, 14 Oct 2010, 10:04:08 EDT
Other sources
- Math used to identify terrorist networksfrom UPIThu, 7 May 2009, 11:56:11 EDT
- Examining Social Networking For Terrorists To Find People Behind Terrorist Attacksfrom Science DailyMon, 4 May 2009, 13:21:44 EDT
- Social networking for terroristsfrom Science BlogMon, 4 May 2009, 12:42:16 EDT
- Social networking for terroristsfrom PhysorgMon, 4 May 2009, 12:08:19 EDT
Latest Science Newsletter
Get the latest and most popular science news articles of the week in your Inbox! It's free!Learn more about
Check out our next project, Biology.Net
Popular science news articles
- Modern dog breeds genetically disconnected from ancient ancestors
- New frog species from Panama dyes fingers yellow
- University of Leicester study finds low agreeableness linked to a preference for aggressive dogs
- Scientists turn patients' skin cells into heart muscle cells to repair their damaged hearts
- New TB test promises to be cheap and fast
- Good news for nanomedicine: Quantum dots appear safe in pioneering study on primates
- UCLA researchers map damaged connections in Phineas Gage's brain
- Using graphene, scientists develop a less toxic way to rust-proof steel
- 1,000 years of climate data confirms Australia's warming
- OMG! Texting ups truthfulness, new iPhone study suggests
- Good news for nanomedicine: Quantum dots appear safe in pioneering study on primates
- Pacific islands may become refuge for corals in a warming climate, study finds
- In metallic glasses, researchers find a few new atomic structures
- New graphene-based material could revolutionize electronics industry
- UCLA researchers map damaged connections in Phineas Gage's brain
- UCLA researchers map damaged connections in Phineas Gage's brain
- Modern dog breeds genetically disconnected from ancient ancestors
- Google goes cancer: Researchers use search engine algorithm to find cancer biomarkers
- New study examines relationship between social status and wound healing in wild baboons
- New silicon memory chip developed
- Italian merchants funded England's discovery of North America
- New graphene-based material could revolutionize electronics industry
- Babies' brains benefit from music lessons, researchers find
- Happiness model developed by MU researcher could help people go from good to great
- UCLA researchers map damaged connections in Phineas Gage's brain