Conceptualizing and implementing an agent-based model of information flow and decision making during hurricane threats

This article introduces an agent-based modeling laboratory for investigating how evolving hazard information, propagated through forecaster, media, public official, and peer information networks, affects patterns of public protective-action decisions during hurricane threats. The model, called CHIME...

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Veröffentlicht in:Environmental modelling & software : with environment data news 2019-12, Vol.122, p.104524, Article 104524
Hauptverfasser: Watts, Joshua, Morss, Rebecca E., Barton, C. Michael, Demuth, Julie L.
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container_start_page 104524
container_title Environmental modelling & software : with environment data news
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creator Watts, Joshua
Morss, Rebecca E.
Barton, C. Michael
Demuth, Julie L.
description This article introduces an agent-based modeling laboratory for investigating how evolving hazard information, propagated through forecaster, media, public official, and peer information networks, affects patterns of public protective-action decisions during hurricane threats. The model, called CHIME ABM, provides a platform for integrating atmospheric science, social science, and computer and information science knowledge and data to explore the complex socio-ecological dynamics of modern hazard information and decision systems from a new perspective. First, the model's interdisciplinary conceptualization and implementation is described. Results are then presented from experiments demonstrating the model's behaviors and comparing patterns of evacuation decisions when key agent parameters and the geographical population distribution, forecast skill, and storm are varied. The article illustrates how this type of theoretically and empirically informed digital laboratory can be used to develop new insights into the interactions among environmental hazards, information flow, protective decisions, and societal outcomes. •Agent-based modeling helps elucidate how evolving hazards, information, and decisions interact.•Information propagates across space, time, and people to influence evacuation patterns.•As threat uncertainty decreases, feedback loops rapidly increase risk assessments.
doi_str_mv 10.1016/j.envsoft.2019.104524
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subjects Agent-based modeling
Agent-based models
Atmospheric models
Atmospheric sciences
Decision making
Environmental hazards
Evacuation decisions
Geographical distribution
Hurricanes
Information flow
Information networks
Information systems
Laboratories
Mathematical models
Natural hazards
Population distribution
Risk communication
title Conceptualizing and implementing an agent-based model of information flow and decision making during hurricane threats
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