Abstract
The effectiveness of disaster response depends on the correctness and timeliness of data regarding the location and the impact of the event. These two issues are critical when the data come from citizens’ tweets, since the automatic classification of disaster-related tweets suffers from many shortcomings. In this paper, we explore an approach based on participatory sensing (i.e., a subset of mobile crowdsourcing that emphasizes the active and intentional participation of citizens to collect data from the place where they live or work). We operate with the hypothesis of a “friendly world”, that is by assuming that after a calamitous event, in the survivors prevails the feeling of helping those who suffer. The extraction, from the Twitter repository, of the few tweets relevant to the event of interest has a long processing time. With the aggravating circumstance in the phase that follows a severe earthquake, the elaboration of tweets clashes with the need to act promptly. Our proposal allows a huge reduction of the processing time. This goal is reached by introducing a service and a mobile app, the latter is an intermediate tool between Twitter and the citizens, suitable to assist them to write structured messages that act as surrogates of tweets. The article describes the architecture of the software service and the steps involved in the retrieval, from the Twitter server, of the messages coming from citizens living in the places hit by the earthquake; moreover, it details the storage of those messages into a geographical database and their processing using SQL.
Highlights
Think of a territory where a severe seismic event has occurred
The paper focuses on the architecture of a software service and its development, as well as a mobile app suitable to assist them to write structured messages that act as surrogates of tweets
This paper is part of the rich group of studies that have investigated how to use social media to support the activities connected with the phases following a devastating event
Summary
Think of a territory where a severe seismic event has occurred. The consequences are well known: death and destruction of buildings and infrastructures. The phase that follows the seismic event is dramatically complex both for people residing in the hit territories and for disaster responders. These latter urgently need to have “an overall picture” of the affected areas in order to be able to organize the rescue operations. The most critical questions to be answered concern: what are the affected municipalities; which assets have been damaged (dwellings, public buildings, etc.), and which infrastructures (highways, bridges, etc.); and to what extent they have been damaged. The possibility of saving lives depends on the speed and effectiveness of first responders
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