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E-grāmata: Emergency Alert and Warning Systems: Current Knowledge and Future Research Directions

  • Formāts: 142 pages
  • Izdošanas datums: 19-Apr-2018
  • Izdevniecība: National Academies Press
  • Valoda: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9780309467384
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  • Formāts: 142 pages
  • Izdošanas datums: 19-Apr-2018
  • Izdevniecība: National Academies Press
  • Valoda: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9780309467384
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Following a series of natural disasters, including Hurricane Katrina, that revealed shortcomings in the nation's ability to effectively alert populations at risk, Congress passed the Warning, Alert, and Response Network (WARN) Act in 2006. Today, new technologies such as smart phones and social media platforms offer new ways to communicate with the public, and the information ecosystem is much broader, including additional official channels, such as government social media accounts, opt-in short message service (SMS)-based alerting systems, and reverse 911 systems; less official channels, such as main stream media outlets and weather applications on connected devices; and unofficial channels, such as first person reports via social media. Traditional media have also taken advantage of these new tools, including their own mobile applications to extend their reach of beyond broadcast radio, television, and cable. Furthermore, private companies have begun to take advantage of the large amounts of data about users they possess to detect events and provide alerts and warnings and other hazard-related information to their users.



More than 60 years of research on the public response to alerts and warnings has yielded many insights about how people respond to information that they are at risk and the circumstances under which they are most likely to take appropriate protective action. Some, but not all, of these results have been used to inform the design and operation of alert and warning systems, and new insights continue to emerge. Emergency Alert and Warning Systems reviews the results of past research, considers new possibilities for realizing more effective alert and warning systems, explores how a more effective national alert and warning system might be created and some of the gaps in our present knowledge, and sets forth a research agenda to advance the nation's alert and warning capabilities.

Table of Contents



Front Matter Summary 1 Understanding Public Response to Alerts and Warnings 2 Building an Integrated Alert and Warning Ecosystem 3 A Research Agenda 4 Challenges to Building Better Alerting Systems Appendixes Appendix A: Current Alert and Warning Systems and Their Characteristics Appendix B: Summaries of Research Results from DHS-Supported Principal Investigators Appendix C: Briefers to the Committee
SUMMARY
1(82)
1 Understanding Public Response To Alerts And Warnings
18(27)
Results from Earlier Decades of Research
18(10)
Recent Research
28(17)
2 Building An Integrated Alert And Warning Ecosystem
45(11)
Need for an Integrated Alert and Warning Ecosystem
48(1)
Properties of an Integrated Alert and Warning System
49(2)
Evolution of an Integrated Alert and Warning Ecosystem
51(5)
3 A Research Agenda
56(18)
Public Response to Alerts and Warnings
56(8)
Post-Alert Feedback and Monitoring for Emergency Organizations
64(1)
Technical Challenges and Their Impact
65(9)
4 Challenges To Building Better Alerting Systems
74(9)
Adoption of Alert and Warning Systems
74(2)
Ever Changing Technology
76(1)
Coupling Research with Emergency Managers and the Private Sector
77(1)
Incentives to Participate
78(1)
Limits in Forecasting
78(5)
APPENDIXES
A Current Alert and Warning Systems and Their Characteristics
83(8)
B Summaries of Research Results from DHS-Supported Principal Investigators
91(36)
C Briefers to the Committee
127