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Understanding and engineering the firearm ecosystem in the United States

21 December 2023
10:00 am
San Ponziano Complex - Conference Room

The United States leads high-income countries in both firearm homicide and suicide rates, with close to fifty thousand firearm-related deaths per year – a figure higher than motor vehicle-related deaths. A fundamental step toward reducing firearm-related harms is to understand causal relationships among potentially contributing factors, such as firearm prevalence, state legislation, media exposure, and people’s opinion on firearm safety. These factors, linked to one another in a complex and multifaceted way, form the “firearm ecosystem.” This talk presents new insight into the firearm ecosystem on three different scales. On the macroscale (nation and states), we put forward an information-theoretic framework to unravel causal links between mass shootings, media coverage on firearm control, and firearm prevalence. Our analysis points at a previously overlooked link between media and firearm prevalence, suggesting that people might rush to buy guns after a mass shooting as they fear that new regulations may come into effect and their right to acquire a weapon be challenged. On the mesoscale (cities), we apply scaling theory to study firearm prevalence, accessibility, and violence throughout the country. We demonstrate a superliner scaling of violence and a surprising sublinear scaling of both prevalence and accessibility, suggesting that guns are seen as a class of infrastructure for the country (like roads or bridges). On the microscale (people), we detail the modus operandi of fame-seeking mass shooters using the information-theoretic concept of surprisal. Our analysis demonstrates that these individuals carefully plan their attacks to be different from past shooters and that the tendency to deviate from history is, in fact, rewarded by fame.

 

Join at: imt.lu/conference

relatore: 
Maurizio Porfiri, New York University
Units: 
MUSAM