Abstract

Preparing a plan for reaction to a grave emergency is a significant first stage in disaster management. A group of experts can do such preparation. Best results are obtained with group members having diverse backgrounds and access to different relevant data. The output of this stage should be a plan as comprehensive as possible, taking into account various perspectives. The group can organize itself as a collaborative decision-making team with a process cycle involving modeling the process, defining the objectives of the decision outcome, gathering data, generating options and evaluating them according to the defined objectives. The meeting participants may have their own evidences concerning people’s location at the beginning of the emergency and assumptions about people’s reactions once it occurs. Geographical information is typically crucial for the plan, because the plan must be based on the location of the safe areas, the distances to move people, the connecting roads or other evacuation links, the ease of movement of the rescue personnel, and other geography-based considerations. The paper deals with this scenario and it introduces a computer tool intended to support the experts to prepare the plan by incorporating the various viewpoints and data. The group participants should be able to generate, visualize and compare the outcomes of their contributions. The proposal is complemented with an example of use: it is a real case simulation in the event of a tsunami following an earthquake at a certain urban location.

Highlights

  • Specialists agree that a disaster management process consists of four phases: preparedness, mitigation, response and recovery [1]

  • We may describe the process of preparing a plan for rescue actions in the case of certain types of emergencies as a spatial decision-making scenario

  • The area we must divide the work in two different dimensions: Hypothesis Dimension and Time hypothesis dimension directly relates to the collaboration process between stakeholders

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Summary

Introduction

Specialists agree that a disaster management process consists of four phases: preparedness, mitigation, response and recovery [1]. These terrain features should allow rescue teams to access the threatened place for helping people and/or bringing people to safer locations. Instead of trying to predict the future, scenarios are possible descriptions of what the future might look like

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