. Space Industry and Business News .




.
SHAKE AND BLOW
New models to aid hurricane-evacuation planning
by Emil Venere
West Lafayette IN (SPX) Oct 21, 2011

File image courtesy AFP.

Researchers are developing detailed models to predict how populations behave during hurricane evacuations to better plan for the disasters. The models will be used by public policymakers to improve how evacuations are carried out, said Satish Ukkusuri, an associate professor of civil engineering at Purdue University.

"For example, during Hurricane Rita many people evacuated at the same time, not following the evacuation instructions," he said. "Then everyone was stuck on the freeway for a very long time and ran out of gas, further worsening the traffic congestion.

"The gas stations were depleted of fuel; people were out of food and water. But if you could stage the evacuation properly and we could understand how households react to evacuation warnings and make evacuation decisions, we could build better evacuation strategies."

Rita hit Texas and Louisiana in 2005, causing extensive damage, killing seven people directly and 120 overall from other factors, including evacuation mishaps.

"The models will lead to a practical means of predicting specifically how people will behave during a hurricane," Ukkusuri said. "Who will evacuate and who will stay? When will they evacuate, where will they go and which routes will they use? Understanding these issues is important to make evacuations safer and more effective."

The interdisciplinary work involves both engineering and the social sciences. Purdue is working with researchers at Florida International University and Virginia Tech.

"There are two major pieces to this work: behavioral research and computational modeling," Ukkusuri said. "The behavioral part is to learn how people in different demographic groups respond to hurricanes."

Survey data have been collected from people in regions impacted by hurricanes Katrina, Ivan and Rita. The engineering piece focuses on building transportation models for safe evacuation using the survey data. Different scenarios are analyzed with the computational models to improve the evacuation efficiency for future hurricanes.

"We are building a large-scale simulation model using computational techniques," Ukkusuri said.

"There is a great need now to bridge varied disciplines and build tools from a holistic point of view, and that is what we are doing. These kinds of models are going to be more important in the future because of increasing storm severity from climate change and rising population density in coastal areas."

The work has been funded with several grants from the National Science Foundation totaling about $1.25 million. A current portion of the research, funded with a new $500,000 NSF grant, focuses on understanding the impact of evacuation warnings on household behavior using complex network science tools. These models will be tested in the Miami-Dade and Houston areas.

Researchers are using Purdue's new Hansen cluster supercomputer at the university's Rosen Center for Advanced Computing, the research arm of ITaP, or Information Technology at Purdue. The models will include vital information about how people use various tools such as mobile phones, social media and community social ties to make hurricane evacuation decisions.

Similar modeling approaches also are useful for other types of disasters.

"People get information from TV, the local emergency preparedness office, text messages and emails," Ukkusuri said. "We want to understand how that information spreads within the social network. People are connected differently.

Some have tight-knit, family oriented communities, where conceivably news spreads fast, but others are more isolated and rely more on TV, Internet and social media tools as opposed to their pastor or friends."

Related Links
Purdue School of Civil Engineering
Bringing Order To A World Of Disasters
When the Earth Quakes
A world of storm and tempest




.
.
Get Our Free Newsletters Via Email
...
Buy Advertising Editorial Enquiries






.

. Comment on this article via your Facebook, Yahoo, AOL, Hotmail login.

Share this article via these popular social media networks
del.icio.usdel.icio.us DiggDigg RedditReddit GoogleGoogle



SHAKE AND BLOW
Clustered hurricanes reduce impact on ecosystems
Brisbane, Australia (SPX) Oct 20, 2011
New research has found that hurricane activity is 'clustered' rather than random, which has important long-term implications for coastal ecosystems and human population. The research was carried out by Professor Peter Mumby from The University of Queensland Global Change Institute and School of Biological Sciences, Professor David Stephenson and Dr Renato Vitolo (Willis Research Fellow) at ... read more


SHAKE AND BLOW
Study: No negative impact from e-readers

Greenpeace criticises Japan radiation screening

Apple profit soars but misses high expectations

China rare earths giant halts output as prices fall

SHAKE AND BLOW
First MEADS Battle Manager Begins Integration Testing in the United States

Elbit Establishes Israeli MOD Comms Equipment Supply Upgrade and Maintenance Project

Boeing FAB-T Demonstrates High-Data-Rate Communications with AEHF Satellite Test Terminal

NRL TacSat-4 Launches to Augment Communications Needs

SHAKE AND BLOW
Final checks for first Soyuz launch from Kourou

Soyuz is put through its paces for Thursday's launch

Russia blames scientists for rocket crashes

Space Exploration Technologies Ready to Compete for Upcoming DoD Launches

SHAKE AND BLOW
Galileo - keeping time with atomic clocks

Factfile on Galileo, Europe's rival to GPS

Soyuz ready with Galileo satellites for milestone launch

Lockheed Martin Powers on the GPS III Pathfinder

SHAKE AND BLOW
China's aviation sector sees slower growth: report

Aircraft leasing growing in Latin America

Northrop Grumman Extends Airport Realtime Collaboration Capability

Boeing Forecasts 1,250 New Airplanes Needed in Northeast Asia

SHAKE AND BLOW
A new scheme for photonic quantum computing

Point defects in super-chilled diamonds may offer stable candidates for quantum computing bits

New knowledge about 'flawed' diamonds could speed the development of diamond-based quantum computers

Researchers Realize High-Power, Narrowband Terahertz Source at Room Temperature

SHAKE AND BLOW
NASA Readies New Type of Earth-Observing Satellite for Launch

Astrium signs new Pleiades contract

New program to expand, enhance use of LIDAR sensing technology

Indra Tries In Madrid And Seville Space Technology To Detect Heat Islands

SHAKE AND BLOW
Home washing machines: Source of potentially harmful ocean 'microplastic' pollution

Pollutants linked to a 450 percent increase in risk of birth defects

Greenpeace's Rainbow Warrior III makes maiden voyage

More oil spills from stricken New Zealand ship


.

The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2011 - Space Media Network. AFP and UPI Wire Stories are copyright Agence France-Presse and United Press International. ESA Portal Reports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additional copyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement,agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by Space Media Network on any Web page published or hosted by Space Media Network. Privacy Statement