Believe in the Model: Mishandle the Emergency
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Simon French
and Carmen Niculae
You can hardly tell where the computer models finish and the dinosaurs begin.Laura Dern, on the film Jurassic ParkDuring the past quarter century there have been many developments in scientific models and computer codes to help predict the ongoing consequences in the aftermath of many types of emergency: e.g. storms and flooding, chemical and nuclear accident, epidemics such as SARS and terrorist attack. Some of these models relate to the immediate events and can help in managing the emergency; others predict longer term impacts and thus can help shape the strategy for the return to normality. But there are many pitfalls in the way of using these models effectively. Firstly, non-scientists and, sadly, many scientists believe in the models predictions too much. The inherent uncertainties in the models are underestimated; sometimes almost unacknowledged. This means that initial strategies may later need to be revised in ways that unsettle the public, losing their trust in the emergency management process. Secondly, the output from these models form an extremely valuable input to the decision making process; but only one such input. There is a need to draw on much tacit knowledge which by definition cannot reside in a decision support system. Most emergencies are events that have huge social and economic impacts alongside the health and environmental consequences. While we can model the latter passably well, we are not so good at modelling economic impacts and very poor at modelling social impacts. Our knowledge of them is tacit and they lie in the complex space of Snowdens Cynefin categorisation of decision contexts. Thus we draw upon recent thinking in both decision support and knowledge management systems to suggest that we need a more socio-technical approach to developing crisis response system; and, in particular, we explore how model predictions should be drawn into emergency management processes in more balanced ways than often has occurred in the past.
©2011 Walter de Gruyter GmbH & Co. KG, Berlin/Boston
Articles in the same Issue
- Special Article
- When Stakeholders Perceive Threats and Risks Differently: the Use of Group Support Systems to Develop a Common Understanding and a Shared Response
- Believe in the Model: Mishandle the Emergency
- Impacts of User Interface Complexity on User Acceptance and Performance in Safety-Critical Systems
- Performance Information Systems for Emergency Response: Field Examination and Simulation of End-To-End Rural Response Systems
- Research Article
- The Cycle of Preparedness: Establishing a Framework to Prepare for Terrorist Threats
- Realtime Testing of a Regional Poison Information Center's Disaster Plan
- Communication/News
- Modernizing Homeland Defense and Security
- Alert Status Red: Awareness, Knowledge and Reaction to the Threat Advisory System
- Related Research Article
- Integrating Disaster Reduction Into Development
- Book Review
- World of Risk: A New Approach to Global Strategy and Leadership
- Homeland Security: A Documentary History
- Book Review: A Dangerous Place: California's Unsettling Fate
- Letter to the Editor
- Preface to the Special Edition of JHSEM
Articles in the same Issue
- Special Article
- When Stakeholders Perceive Threats and Risks Differently: the Use of Group Support Systems to Develop a Common Understanding and a Shared Response
- Believe in the Model: Mishandle the Emergency
- Impacts of User Interface Complexity on User Acceptance and Performance in Safety-Critical Systems
- Performance Information Systems for Emergency Response: Field Examination and Simulation of End-To-End Rural Response Systems
- Research Article
- The Cycle of Preparedness: Establishing a Framework to Prepare for Terrorist Threats
- Realtime Testing of a Regional Poison Information Center's Disaster Plan
- Communication/News
- Modernizing Homeland Defense and Security
- Alert Status Red: Awareness, Knowledge and Reaction to the Threat Advisory System
- Related Research Article
- Integrating Disaster Reduction Into Development
- Book Review
- World of Risk: A New Approach to Global Strategy and Leadership
- Homeland Security: A Documentary History
- Book Review: A Dangerous Place: California's Unsettling Fate
- Letter to the Editor
- Preface to the Special Edition of JHSEM