Articles | Volume 20, issue 8
https://doi.org/10.5194/nhess-20-2281-2020
https://doi.org/10.5194/nhess-20-2281-2020
Research article
 | 
20 Aug 2020
Research article |  | 20 Aug 2020

Testing the impact of direct and indirect flood warnings on population behaviour using an agent-based model

Thomas O'Shea, Paul Bates, and Jeffrey Neal

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Cited articles

Abebe, Y. A., Ghorbani, A., Nikoolic, I., Vojinovic, Z., and Sanchez, A.: A coupled flood-agent-institution modelling (CLAIM) framework for urban flood risk management, Environ. Model. Softw., 111, 483–492, 2019. 
Alexander, C.: The Nature of Order: An Essay on the Art of Building and The Nature of the Universe, in: Book 1: The phenomenon of life, CES, Berkeley, CA, 1980. 
Assaf, H. and Hartford, D. N. D.: A virtual reality approach to public protection and emergency preparedness planning in dam safety analysis, in: Proceedings of the Canadian dam association conference, Victoria, 2002. 
Axelrod, R.: The Complexity of Cooperation: Agent-based models of competition and collaberation, Princeton University Press, Princeton, NJ, 1970. 
Barendrecht, M., Viglione, A., and Blöschl, G.: A dynamic framework for flood risk, Water Security, 1, 3–11, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.wasec.2017.02.001, 2017. 
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Short summary
Outlined here is a multi-disciplinary framework for analysing and evaluating the nature of vulnerability to, and capacity for, flood hazard within a complex urban society. It provides scope beyond the current, reified, descriptors of flood risk and models the role of affected individuals within flooded areas. Using agent-based modelling coupled with the LISFLOOD-FP hydrodynamic model, potentially influential behaviours that give rise to the flood hazard system are identified and discussed.
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