Abstract

Timely knowledge sharing in disaster management (DM) is clearly vital, but it is remains challenging. Roles involved in DM processes often cut across many organizational boundaries and are dynamic. Knowledge involved is enormous and diverse. It includes information related to varieties of disasters, roles descriptions, plans and operations. Alas, practices may also vary across different regions and authorities. This paper makes a crucial contribution to address the knowledge sharing challenge by providing a knowledge based systems approach to facilitate structuring, storing and reusing DM knowledge.The contribution of this paper is three folds: Firstly, it presents a metamodel-based architecture suitable for various distributed knowledge sharing settings; Secondly, it presents an actual implementation of such a system, the Disaster Management Knowledge Repository (DMKR1.0). DMKR facilitates collaboration and DM knowledge sharing using a tailored DM language. This offers a flexible structure to allow the storage and retrieval not only of observed and measured data, but also interpretative and inferred information of the disaster management knowledge. Thirdly, the paper provides disaster management exemplars of how DMKR users can easily instantiate DM models to communicate and to generalize their knowledge for the benefit of sharing it within their community. This presents a compelling evidence of the soundness and the effectiveness of the overall approach to DM knowledge sharing.

Highlights

  • Disaster Management (DM) processes involve many interacting elements e.g.: people, authority, emergency teams, resources, procedures, uncertain environmental situations and many more

  • This paper develops an actual knowledge sharing system, the Disaster Management Knowledge Repository (DMKR) system which stores DM solution modelling components and guides users on how to reconstruct solutions as new contexts arise

  • For Disaster Management Metamodel (DMM), when a model fragment is indexed by the metamodel, the actual operational DM knowledge will need to be generated as M0-Fragments

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Disaster Management (DM) processes involve many interacting elements e.g.: people, authority, emergency teams, resources, procedures, uncertain environmental situations and many more. DM activities often extend across various government sectors, non-governmental organizations/industry, from international levels down to state or region levels and may include individual people and various facets of society It is often unclear what are the exact tasks and responsibilities before, during or after a disaster strikes. We developed and validated a DM language as a middle layer of knowledge in the form of a disaster-independent metamodel to unify knowledge from different disaster experiences in (Othman, Beydoun et al 2014). This required tuning the metamodelling process to DM to ensure that appropriate knowledge sources (candidate models) are identified and used as input to the process.

Background and Related Work
Knowledge Representation in DMKR
DMKR Detailed Design
Consistency Checker Module
Metamodel Formulation Module
Tactical Procedure Organization Structure
Demonstrating DMKR in Real-world Disaster Problems
Conclusion and Future Works
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call