Affiliation:
1. Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory Laurel Maryland USA
2. Industrial and Operations Engineering Department University of Michigan Ann Arbor Michigan USA
3. Civil and Environmental Engineering Department University of Michigan Ann Arbor Michigan USA
4. Department of Civil Engineering University of Colorado Denver Denver Colorado USA
Abstract
AbstractHow evacuations are managed can substantially impact the risks faced by affected communities. Having a better understanding of the mobility patterns of evacuees can improve the planning and management of these evacuations. Although mobility patterns during evacuations have traditionally been studied through surveys, mobile phone location data can be used to capture these movements for a greater number of evacuees over a larger geographic area. Several approaches have been used to identify hurricane evacuation patterns from location data; however, each approach relies on researcher judgment to first determine the areas from which evacuations occurred and then identify evacuations by determining when an individual spends a specified number of nights away from home. This approach runs the risk of detecting non‐evacuation behaviors (e.g., work trips, vacations, etc.) and incorrectly labeling them as evacuations where none occurred. In this article, we developed a data‐driven method to determine which areas experienced evacuations. With this approach, we inferred home locations of mobile phone users, calculated their departure times, and determined if an evacuation may have occurred by comparing the number of departures around the time of the hurricane against historical trends. As a case study, we applied this method to location data from Hurricanes Matthew and Irma to identify areas that experienced evacuations and illustrate how this method can be used to detect changes in departure behavior leading up to and following a hurricane. We validated and examined the inferred homes for representativeness and validated observed evacuation trends against past studies.
Funder
National Science Foundation
Subject
Physiology (medical),Safety, Risk, Reliability and Quality
Cited by
1 articles.
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