Monday, December 09, 2019

Modeling Homeowners Post-flood Reconstruction Decisions

In the past we have developed agent-based models to explore a wide variety of applications and even to explored at humanitarian assistance after a natural disaster, however we have not explored how people might decide to rebuild or not after a natural disaster. Well that was until now. In a new paper with Kim McEligot, Peggy Brouse and myself entitled "Sea Bright, New Jersey Reconstructed: Agent-Based Protection Theory Model Responses to Hurricane Sandy" which was published as part of the 2019 Winter Simulation Conference. In the paper we use a hindcast (aka backtesting) of Hurricane Sandy’s damage to Sea Bright, NJ and explore homeowners post-flood reconstruction decisions. Below we provide the abstract to the paper, a short movie of the model running, along with a link to access the source code and data of the model, and finally a link to the full paper.

Abstract:
Coastal flooding is the most expensive type of natural disaster in the United States. Policy initiatives to mitigate the effects of these events are dependent upon understanding flood victim responses at an individual and municipal level. Agent-Based Modeling (ABM) is an effective tool for analyzing community-wide responses to natural disaster, but the quality of the ABM’s performance is often challenging to determine. This paper discusses the complexity of the Protective Action Decision Model (PADM) and Protection Motivation Theory (PMT) for human decision making regarding hazard mitigations. A combined (PADM/PMT) model is developed and integrated into the MASON modeling framework. The ABM implements a hind-cast of Hurricane Sandy’s damage to Sea Bright, NJ and homeowner post-flood reconstruction decisions. It is validated against damage assessments and post-storm surveys. The contribution of socio-economic factors and built environment on model performance is also addressed and suggests that mitigation for townhouse communities will be challenging.
The model source code (utilizing MASON Version 17) and data is available on CoMSES.net: http://bit.ly/SEABrightABM.

Our adaptation of the Protection Motivation Theory and Protective Action Decision Model.


Full Reference:
McEligot, K. Brouse, P. and Crooks A.T. (2019), Sea Bright, New Jersey Reconstructed: Agent-Based Protection Theory Model Responses to Hurricane Sandy, in Mustafee, N., Bae, K.-H.G., Lazarova-Molnar, S., Rabe, M., Szabo, C., Haas, P. and Son, Y-J. (eds.), Proceedings of the 2019 Winter Simulation Conference, National Harbor, MD, pp 251-262 (pdf)

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