What will they do? Modelling self-evacuation archetypes
A decade on from the devastating Black Saturday bushfires in Victoria, Australia, we are at a point where computer simulations of community evacuations are starting to be used within the emergency services. While fire progression modelling is embedded in strategic and operational settings at all lev...
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Zusammenfassung: | A decade on from the devastating Black Saturday bushfires in Victoria,
Australia, we are at a point where computer simulations of community
evacuations are starting to be used within the emergency services. While fire
progression modelling is embedded in strategic and operational settings at all
levels of government across Victoria, modelling of community response to such
fires is only just starting to be evaluated in earnest. For community response
models to become integral to bushfire planning and preparedness, the key
question to be addressed is: when faced with a bushfire, what will a community
really do? Typically this understanding has come from local experience and
expertise within the community and services, however the trend is to move
towards more informed data driven approaches. In this paper we report on the
latest work within the emergency sector in this space. Particularly, we discuss
the application of Strahan et al.'s self-evacuation archetypes to an
agent-based model of community evacuation in regional Victoria. This work is
part of the consolidated bushfire evacuation modelling collaboration between
several emergency management stakeholders. |
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DOI: | 10.48550/arxiv.2105.12366 |