2014 PredictionofHumanEmergencyBehav
- (Song et al., 2014) ⇒ Xuan Song, Quanshi Zhang, Yoshihide Sekimoto, and Ryosuke Shibasaki. (2014). “Prediction of Human Emergency Behavior and their Mobility Following Large-scale Disaster.” In: Proceedings of the 20th ACM SIGKDD International Conference on Knowledge Discovery and Data Mining (KDD-2014) Journal. ISBN:978-1-4503-2956-9 doi:10.1145/2623330.2623628
Subject Headings:
Notes
Cited By
- http://scholar.google.com/scholar?q=%222014%22+Prediction+of+Human+Emergency+Behavior+and+their+Mobility+Following+Large-scale+Disaster
- http://dl.acm.org/citation.cfm?id=2623330.2623628&preflayout=flat#citedby
Quotes
Author Keywords
- Data mining; disaster informatics; human mobility; spatial databases and gis; spatio-temporal data mining
Abstract
The frequency and intensity of natural disasters has significantly increased over the past decades and this trend is predicted to continue. Facing these possible and unexpected disasters, accurately predicting human emergency behavior and their mobility will become the critical issue for planning effective humanitarian relief, disaster management, and long-term societal reconstruction. In this paper, we build up a large human mobility database (GPS records of 1.6 million users over one year) and several different datasets to capture and analyze human emergency behavior and their mobility following the Great East Japan Earthquake and Fukushima nuclear accident. Based on our empirical analysis through these data, we find that human behavior and their mobility following large-scale disaster sometimes correlate with their mobility patterns during normal times, and are also highly impacted by their social relationship, intensity of disaster, damage level, government appointed shelters, news reporting, large population flow and etc. On the basis of these findings, we develop a model of human behavior that takes into account these factors for accurately predicting human emergency behavior and their mobility following large-scale disaster. The experimental results and validations demonstrate the efficiency of our behavior model, and suggest that human behavior and their movements during disasters may be significantly more predictable than previously thought.
References
;
Author | volume | Date Value | title | type | journal | titleUrl | doi | note | year | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
2014 PredictionofHumanEmergencyBehav | Xuan Song Quanshi Zhang Yoshihide Sekimoto Ryosuke Shibasaki | Prediction of Human Emergency Behavior and their Mobility Following Large-scale Disaster | 10.1145/2623330.2623628 | 2014 |