Sustainable Disaster Recovery: Multiagent-Based Model for Integrating Environmental Vulnerability into Decision-Making Processes of the Associated Stakeholders
Authored by Mohamed S Eid, Islam H El-adaway
Date Published: 2017
DOI: 10.1061/(asce)up.1943-5444.0000349
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Abstract
The goal of sustainable disaster recovery is to regain the built
environment's functionality while decreasing the vulnerability of the
society to future perturbations. This requires a new generation of
decision support tools that integrate the host community's vulnerability
assessment while taking into account the stakeholders' interactions,
needs, and preferences. The available disaster recovery research focuses
on the optimization and reconstruction of isolated projects rather than
taking into account the host community's overall vulnerability and
welfare. Moreover, the available research did not simultaneously take
into account the stakeholders' preferences and needs. To this effect,
this paper presents an agent-based model that integrates an
environmental vulnerability indicator to better guide the
decision-making process of the associated stakeholders. Such an approach
will aid urban planners to redevelop societies into a more resilient
status. This paper implements a five-step research methodology that
comprises: (1)utilizing a comprehensive assessment tool to measure
community's environmental vulnerability; (2)developing the objective
functions and learning algorithms of the different associated
stakeholders; (3)modeling the different attributes and potential
strategies interrelated with the different stakeholders; (4)creating an
interdependent multiagent-based model that concurrently simulates the
aforementioned information; and finally, (5)interpreting and analyzing
the results generated from the developed model. The proposed model
adopts post-Katrina recovery as the application domain, and thus was
tested using the housing and infrastructure recovery projects in three
coastal counties in Mississippi. To this end, the model was able to
optimize and adapt to the changing vulnerability conditions of the host
community. The model also provided an optimal utilization of the
infrastructure to decrease the built environment vulnerability to future
natural hazards. This provided better outcomes in relation to
environmental vulnerability and stakeholders' individual utility
functions when compared to the actual implemented disaster recovery
plans. For future work, this research will target the integration of
other vulnerability indicators. This will lead to more effective
representation of the host communities' complex systems, and ultimately
achieving a holistic sustainable disaster recovery.
Tags
agent-based simulation
Management
Optimization
moral hazard
games
Framework
Cities
Indicators
Hurricane-katrina
Ecological footprint