Abstract

Despite the importance of predicting evacuation mobility dynamics after large scale disasters for effective first response and disaster relief, our general understanding of evacuation behavior remains limited because of the lack of empirical evidence on the evacuation movement of individuals across multiple disaster instances. Here we investigate the GPS trajectories of a total of more than 1 million anonymized mobile phone users whose positions were tracked for a period of 2 months before and after four of the major earthquakes that occurred in Japan. Through a cross comparative analysis between the four disaster instances, we find that in contrast to the assumed complexity of evacuation decision making mechanisms in crisis situations, an individual’s evacuation probability is strongly dependent on the seismic intensity that they experience. In fact, we show that the evacuation probabilities in all earthquakes collapse into a similar pattern, with a critical threshold at around seismic intensity 5.5. This indicates that despite the diversity in the earthquakes profiles and urban characteristics, evacuation behavior is similarly dependent on seismic intensity. Moreover, we found that probability density functions of the distances that individuals evacuate are not dependent on seismic intensities that individuals experience. These insights from empirical analysis on evacuation from multiple earthquake instances using large scale mobility data contributes to a deeper understanding of how people react to earthquakes, and can potentially assist decision makers to simulate and predict the number of evacuees in urban areas with little computational time and cost. This can be achieved by utilizing only the information on population density distribution and seismic intensity distribution, which can be observed instantaneously after the shock.

Highlights

  • Where Sd(z) is the set of local government unit (LGU) that experienced a seismic intensity of z in disaster d, Mi is the total number of users living in LGU i, and Mi is the number of evacuated people from LGU i, which we observe from trajectories of mobile phone location data

  • Using large scale mobility data collected from over 1 million mobile phones of users affected by earthquakes, we carried out a cross-comparative analysis on the evacuation mobility patterns of individuals

  • Through a cross comparison across four large scale earthquakes in Japan, we found that city characteristics vary, the evacuation rates can be approximated well with a single fragility curve with respect to seismic intensities, with a high correlation of R = 0.916

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Summary

Introduction

More recent studies conducted after the Nepal earthquake and Kumamoto earthquake showed that evacuation behavior could be monitored after an earthquake by using mobile phone location data (e.g. GPS, call detail records) obtained from the evacuees [31,32,33]. We provide detailed analysis of evacuation rates and evacuation distances of individuals after multiple earthquakes using large scale mobile phone location datasets from Japan.

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