Abstract

Every year typhoons severely disrupt the normal rhythms of human activities and pose serious threats to China’s coast. Previous studies have shown that the impact extent and degree of a typhoon can be inferred from various geolocation datasets. However, it remains a challenge to unravel how dwellers respond to a typhoon disaster and what they concern most in the places with significant human activity changes. In this study, we integrated the geotagged microblogs with the Tencent’s location request data to advance our understanding of dweller’s collective response to typhoon Hato and the changes in their concerns over the typhoon process. Our results show that Hato induces both negative and positive anomalies in humans’ location request activities and such anomalies could be utilized to characterize the impacts of wind and rainfall brought by Hato to our study area, respectively. Topic analysis of Hato-related geotagged microblogs reveals that the negative location request anomalies are closely related to damage-related topics, whereas the positive anomalies to traffic-related topics. The negative anomalies are significantly correlated with economic loss and population affected at city level as suggested by an over 0.7 adjusted R2. The changes in the anomalies can be used to portray the response and recovery processes of the cities impacted.

Highlights

  • IntroductionTropical storms are one of the most destructive natural disasters

  • Published: 5 March 2022Tropical storms are one of the most destructive natural disasters

  • We identified the linear relationship between the typhoon-induced damages and the maximum and cumulative number of location requests (NLR) anomalies, respectively

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Summary

Introduction

Tropical storms are one of the most destructive natural disasters. Statistics show that during the period from 1998 to 2017, tropical cyclones and typhoons affected around. 726 million people and caused 233,000 deaths and USD 1.33 trillion of economic loss worldwide [1]. Growing evidence has shown that typhoons occur less frequently but tend to be more intense in response to the global climate change [2–5]. 37 years, typhoons that hit East and Southeast Asia have intensified by 12–15% and the proportion of category 4 and 5 storms has doubled or even tripled [6]. China is one of the countries frequently affected by typhoons and has been impacted by eight storms per year from 2010 to 2018. Typhoons have caused over an average of 60 billion RMB Yuan direct economic loss, mainly in the coastal provinces [7].

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