IMPACTS OF HUMAN BEHAVIORAL HETEROGENEITY ON THE BENEFITS OF PROBABILISTIC FLOOD WARNINGS: AN AGENT-BASED MODELING FRAMEWORK
Authored by Ximing Cai, Erhu Du, Barbara Minsker, Samuel Rivera, Laura Myers, Andrew Ernest
Date Published: 2017
DOI: 10.1111/1752-1688.12475
Sponsors:
United States National Science Foundation (NSF)
Platforms:
No platforms listed
Model Documentation:
Flow charts
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
Flood forecasts and warnings are intended to reduce flood-related
property damages and loss of human life. Considerable research has
improved flood forecasting accuracy (e.g., more accurate prediction of
the occurrence of flood events) and lead time. However, the delivery of
improved forecast information alone is not necessarily sufficient to
reduce flood damage and loss of life, as people have varying responses
and reactions to flood warnings. This study develops an agent-based
modeling framework that evaluates the impacts of heterogeneity in human
behaviors (i.e., variation in behaviors in response to flood warnings),
as well as residential density, on the benefits of flood warnings. The
framework is coupled with a traffic model to simulate evacuation
processes within a road network under various flood warning scenarios.
The results show the marginal benefit associated with providing better
flood warnings is significantly constrained if people behave in a more
risk-tolerant manner, especially in high-density residential areas. The
results also show significant impacts of human behavioral heterogeneity
on the benefits of flood warnings, and thus stress the importance of
considering human behavioral heterogeneity in simulating flood
warning-response systems. Further study is suggested to more accurately
model human responses and behavioral heterogeneity, as well as to
include more attributes of residential areas to estimate and improve the
benefits of flood warnings.
Tags
Simulation
Agent-based modeling
Market
Decision-Making
Behavioral heterogeneity
Evacuation
transportation
Flooding
TRANSIMS
Coupled human
Implementation
Natural systems
Perceptions
Decision support
systems
Flood warning
Evacuation behavior