Flood Risk and Preventive Choices: A Framework for Studying Human Behaviors

Author:

Sapienza Alessandro1ORCID,Falcone Rino1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Institute of Cognitive Sciences and Technologies, National Research Council of Italy (ISTC-CNR), 00185 Rome, Italy

Abstract

The topic of flood phenomena has always been of considerable importance due to the high risks it entails, both in terms of potential economic and social damage and the jeopardizing of human lives themselves. The spread of climate change is making this topic even more relevant. This work aims to contribute to evaluating the role that human factors can play in responding to critical hydrogeological phenomena. In particular, we introduce an agent-based platform for analyzing social behaviors in these critical situations. In our experiments, we simulate a population that is faced with the risk of a potentially catastrophic event. In this scenario, citizens (modeled through cognitive agents) must assess the risk they face by relying on their sources of information and mutual trust, enabling them to respond effectively. Specifically, our contributions include (1) an analysis of some behavioral profiles of citizens and authorities; (2) the identification of the “dissonance between evaluation and action” effect, wherein an individual may behave differently from what their information sources suggest, despite having full trust in them in situations of particular risk; (3) the possibility of using the social structure as a “social risk absorber”, enabling support for a higher level of risk. While the results obtained at this level of abstraction are not exhaustive, they identify phenomena that can occur in real-world scenarios and can be useful in defining general guidelines.

Funder

European Union

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

Behavioral Neuroscience,General Psychology,Genetics,Development,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

Reference79 articles.

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3. Cuñado, J., and Ferreira, S. (2011, January 24–26). The macroeconomic impacts of natural disasters: New evidence from floods. Proceedings of the Agricultural and Applied Economics Association’s 2011 AAEA & NAREA Joint Annual Meeting, Pittsburg, PA, USA.

4. A model for estimating flood damage in Italy: Preliminary results;Luino;WIT Trans. Ecol. Environ.,2006

5. Guha-Sapir, D., Vos, F., Below, R., and Ponserre, S. (2012). Annual Disaster Statistical Review 2011: The Numbers and Trends, Centre for Research on the Epidemiology of Disasters (CRED).

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