Berkeley CS students help build a database of police misconduct in California
Students in the Data Science Discovery Program are filling a gap in engineering resources to help journalists more easily sort through large stores of records for their research. The Discovery Program, which is part of Berkeley’s Division of Computing, Data Science, and Society (CDSS), connects around 200 undergraduates with hands-on, team-based data science research projects at Berkeley, government agencies, community groups, and entrepreneurial ventures. Students have worked on projects like the SF Chronicle’s air quality map, the Wall Street Journal’s effort to analyze its source and topic diversity using natural processing language, and the California Reporting Project’s police misconduct database. “I don’t know if we’d be able to do this without them,” said KQED data reporter Lisa Pickoff-White. “None of these newsrooms would be able to automate this work on their own.”