A Simulation Study for Emergency/Disaster Management by Applying Complex Networks Theory

Earthquakes, hurricanes, flooding and terrorist attacks pose a severe threat to our society. What's more, when such a disaster happens, it can spread in a wide range with ubiquitous presence of a large-scale networked system. Therefore, the emergency/disaster management faces new challenges that the decision-makers have extra difficulties in perceiving the disaster dynamic spreading processes under this networked environment. This study tries to use the complex networks theory to tackle this complexity and the result shows the theory is a promising approach to support disaster/emergency management by focusing on simulation experiments of small world networks and scale free networks. The theory can be used to capture and describe the evolution mechanism, evolution discipline and overall behavior of a networked system. In particular, the complex networks theory is very strong at analyzing the complexity and dynamical changes of a networked system, which can improve the situation awareness after a disaster has occurred and help perceive its dynamic process, which is very important for high-quality decision making. In addition, this study also shows the use of the complex networks theory can build a visualized process to track the dynamic spreading of a disaster in a networked system.

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Jin,Li, Jiong,Wang, Yang,Dai, Huaping,Wu, Wei,Dong
Format: Digital revista
Language:English
Published: Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México, Instituto de Ciencias Aplicadas y Tecnología 2014
Online Access:http://www.scielo.org.mx/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S1665-64232014000200006
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