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WARNING SYSTEMS AND PUBLIC RESPONSE

WARNING SYSTEMS AND PUBLIC RESPONSE. Social Science Research Findings and Evidence Based Applications for Practice (Rev 13). PRIMARY AUTHORS. Dennis S. Mileti Professor Emeritus University of Colorado at Boulder & START Center, University of Maryland, College Park Erica Kuligowski

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WARNING SYSTEMS AND PUBLIC RESPONSE

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  1. WARNING SYSTEMS AND PUBLIC RESPONSE Social Science Research Findings and Evidence Based Applications for Practice (Rev 13)

  2. PRIMARY AUTHORS • Dennis S. Mileti • Professor Emeritus • University of Colorado at Boulder & • START Center, University of Maryland, College Park • Erica Kuligowski • Research Associate • University of Colorado at Boulder & • START Center, University of Maryland, College Park

  3. ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS • Contributors: • John H. Sorensen, Oak Ridge Nat’l Lab • Barbara Vogt-Sorensen, Oak Ridge Nat’l Lab • Reviewers: • Susan Cutter,University of South Carolina • David Gillespie, Washington University • Kathleen Tierney, University of Colorado

  4. DISCLAIMER • Supported by: • U.S. Department of Homeland Security, Grant Number N00140510629 to the START Center, University of Maryland at College Park • However: • Opinions, findings & conclusions are the author’s and do not necessarily reflect the views of the U.S. Department of Homeland Security

  5. PURPOSE • SYNTHESIZE: • Findings from social science public warning research for hazards • Do it in plain language • PRESENT: • Evidence-based applications for practice • Regarding the….

  6. FUNDAMENTAL QUESTION How do you Help People in Danger to: -STOP….. -HEAR…. & -TAKE PROTECTIVE ACTIONS FOR….

  7. TERRORIST ATTACKS

  8. TECHNOLOGICAL EVENTS

  9. NATURAL DISASTERS

  10. HAZARDOUS MATERIALSand more….

  11. INCLUDING PUBLIC PROTECTIVE ACTIONS SUCH AS….

  12. VEHICLE EVACUATION

  13. SIDEWALK & STAIRWELL EVACUATION

  14. SHELTERING IN PLACE

  15. BREATHING PROTECTION

  16. THE RESEARCH BASIS • 50+ Years “Warning Response” Research • Emphasis on U.S. publics • Researched Hazards Include: • Natural: Hurricane Camille, Mt. St. Helens • Terrorism: World Trade Center 1993 & 9/11 • Hazardous Materials: Mississauga, Nanticoke • Technology: Three Mile Island • Building Fires: MGM Grand, Cook County Hospital • We Know: • What works, what doesn’t & why, & how to apply it

  17. RESEARCH ON PEOPLE IN COMMUNITIES • 350 Page Annotated Bibliography (1 page/publication with key findings) is Available at: • http://www.colorado.edu/hazards/publications/informer/infrmr2/pubhazbibann.pdf

  18. MOST COMPREHENSIVE SYNTHESIS TO DATE • Mileti, Dennis S., and John H. Sorensen. 1990. Communication of Emergency Public Warnings: A Social Science Perspective and State-of-the-Art Assessment. Report #ORNL-6609. Oak Ridge, TN: Report #ORNL-6609 for the Federal Emergency Management Agency. (Available on line as a pdf file) • Can be found at: http://emc.ornl.gov/EMCWeb/EMC/PDF/CommunicationFinal.pdf

  19. RESEARCH ON OCCUPANTS • 150 Entry Bibliography is Available at: • http://www.colorado.edu/hazards/library/BuildingsEvacBib2007.doc

  20. “PEOPLE” KNOWLEDGE TRANSCENDS HAZARDS • PEOPLE STAY PEOPLE: • Across hazards • AND THE SAME FACTORS: • Determine public behavior across hazards & events • Mathematically modeled & same equations apply • BUT OUTCOMES VARY ACROSS EVENTS: • Because of different quantities for the factors that determine public response occur in different events, e.g., warning message quality, gender & age

  21. WE’LL COVER 12 TOPICS • 1. Warning System Definition • 2. Warning System Preparedness • 3 Myths • 4 Alert • 5. Diffusion • 6. Mobilization • 7. Notification, Messaging & Public Response • 8. Compliance • 9. Monitoring, Evaluation, & Feedback • 10. Destinations • 11. Modernizing Warning Systems • 12. Next Steps

  22. TOPIC 1: WARNING SYSTEM DEFINITION • Warnings Systems Mean: • Different things to different people • All Warning System Have: • The same subsystems • Integrating the Subsystems: • Reduces warning system failures

  23. WARNING SYSTEM SUBSYSTEMS • SUBSYSTEM 1 = Risk Environment: • Natural, technological, civil • SUBSYSTEM 2 = Detection: • Monitoring, detection, data assessment, data analysis, prediction, & informing • SUBSYSTEM 3 = Management: • Interpretation, decision to warn, method of warning, content of warning, channel of warning, monitoring response for feedback & warning revision • SUBSYSTEM 4 = Public Response: • Interpretation, confirmation, response, & warning others

  24. INTEGRATING SUBSYSTEMS Risk Environment Subsystem Management Subsystem Cues Inform & Interpret Monitor Monitor WARNING Detection Subsystem Public Response Subsystem Inform

  25. TOPIC 2: WARNING SYSTEM PREPAREDNESS • Warning System Preparedness: • Elaborate the subsystems • Develop linkages between them • Major Goals: • The rarely used system will work when needed • Weave together organizations, agencies, levels of government & disciplines that rarely interact • No communication link in the chain breaks

  26. ELEMENTS OF PREPAREDNESS • Ready the Warning Players: • Warning plans, operating procedures & protocols • Warning training & exercises • Warning human factors issues addressed • Warning standards of performance • Evidence based: • Warning messages & dissemination channels • Prime the Audience: • Public warning & response education • “Grow” the Warning System Rationally: • Development priorities based on risk assessment

  27. TOPIC 3: THREE MYTHS • A MYTH EXISTS WHEN PEOPLE: • BELIEVEits true (but its not) • Think they have EVIDENCE for it (but they don’t) • WON’T STOP BELIEVINGit (no matter what) • Here Are Three of Them…..

  28. MYTH 1: PANIC • Non-problem: • Never occurred after a warning • Actual Problem: • “We didn’t issue a warning so we wouldn’t cause a panic” • Panic Occurs When: • Spaces are confined • Escape routes ARE available, but • People think: not enough time for everyone to use them, resulting in • People must: “compete to live” • Even then, Panic is Rare

  29. MYTH 2: “KISS” • Definition: • “Keep it simple stupid” • Myth: • Applies to public warning messages • Reality: • Applies to advertising, not public warnings • Warned people become “information starved” • If those who warn don’t say enough, the public will find it elsewhere & confusion can result

  30. MYTH 3: CRY WOLF • Myth: • People don’t respond after false alarms • Reality: • They do (perhaps differently) • False Alarms: • Can be productive for future response “if explained” • Anger local governments because they cost money • Exception: • People ignore sirens, especially if sounded frequently, e.g., for siren tests

  31. TOPIC 4: ALERT • STOP Ongoing Life • Get People’s ATTENTION • CAPTURE Your Audience • But Keep in Mind that….

  32. PEOPLE DON’T REMEMBER INDICATORS • People: • Don’t remember meaning of: • Siren signals (wails, whoops, tones) • Color codes • Don’t distinguish between: • Advisories, watches & warnings • Except: • When signals/codes are “drilled into them”, e.g., weekly fire drills in schools

  33. ALERTING ISN’T SIMPLE • Many Isolate “Themselves” from Information • Some are isolated by circumstance, e.g., poor • And Even when Signals Blare, Many: • Think they’re “safe” & • Disasters happen to other people • Some Sub-populations Need Unique Alerts, e.g., • Hospitals in communities • Hearing impaired in buildings • Visitors & “out-of-towners” • Different language speakers

  34. USE “OBTRUSIVE” ALERTS • Get People’s Attention, e.g., • “Lights on” in theaters • Piercing sounds with TV crawlers • Wake People Up, e.g., • Sleeping children & older adults • Hearing loss & under the influence • Outside Devices Loose Effectiveness if: • Windows shut & air/heat is on • 3 minute sounding 10 decibels over ambient outdoor siren has a 62% chance of waking someone up • Need Indoor Devices for Alert at Night: • Fast moving community event • Fire in a hotel

  35. INFORMAL ALERTING • Warning Diffusion “Among those Warned” • Always happens, count on it, & use it • 9/11 Example: • Most in country learned about attack in 1 hour • Many in towers found out a plane hit from friends/relatives • Rule of Thumb: • 1 informal first warning for every 2 formal first warnings • Informal Alerting Increasing with New Technologies

  36. TOPIC 5: DIFFUSION • Diffusion = Getting the Word Out • A social process regardless of technology used • No “SILVER BULLET” Technology: • Different technologies = different effectiveness • USE ALL OF THEM (relying on one won’t work) • Reach sub-populations in different ways: • And using diverse technologies (channels) helps “confirm” the message which facilitates human response • Effectiveness impacted by time of day/night

  37. DIFFUSSION DATAEXAMPLE 0.1

  38. TOPIC 6: MOBILIZATION • Time between 1st Warning & Starting a Protective Action • People don’t all act at once • Getting ready to respond delays response • People Delay in Order to: • Locate family & gather possessions • Confirm warning & need to take action • Talk things over with others • And a Few People Don’t Respond at All

  39. A VIEW OF MOBILIZATION • Can Vary By: • Urgency of event • Severity of threat • Time of day/night • Time increases as message quality decreases • Non-linear (curved) Relationship between Time & Starting a Protective Action: • Typically an “S” shaped relationship • Here’s an example....

  40. HURRICANE FLOYD DEPARTURE TIMES

  41. TOPIC 7: NOTIFICATION, MESSAGING & PUBLIC RESPONSE

  42. PREDICTING PUBLIC BEHAVIOR • Predictions Based on SCIENCE Work: • “A” causes “B” • Predictions Based on NON-SCIENCE Don’t: • What people did in past events: • Using a past “B” to predict a future “B” • Behavioral intention surveys: • Intentions (opinions) & behavior (actions) are different • Key determinants of public warning response don’t operate in pre-event surveys & aren’t known by respondents

  43. FACTORS THAT IMPACT PUBLIC RESPONSE • Many “Statistically Significant” Factors Documented by Research but…. • They Vary in Importance: • Strong vs. weak relationships • Real vs. spurious effects • High vs. low research evidence • Strong Evidence Exists for What Follows

  44. INFORMATION FACTORS “About the Warning Message”

  45. FACTOR 1: THE MESSAGE • Five Dimensions: • Channel • Frequency • Content • Style • Source

  46. FACTOR 1: THE MESSAGE(cont’d) • Number of Communication Channels: • The “more the better” • Type of Communication Channel: • Personal channels work best • The “more the better” • Communication Frequency: • The “more” its repeated & heard the better: • Repetition fosters confirmation • Confirmation fosters belief • Belief fosters taking action

  47. FACTOR 1: THE MESSAGE(cont’d) • CONTENT (What to Say): • WHAT: Tell them what to do • WHEN: Tell them when (time) to do it • WHERE: Say who should & shouldn’t do it • WHY: Tell about the hazard’s consequences • WHO: Say who‘s talking (source): • There is NO single credible source, so use multiple sources for the same message

  48. FACTOR 1: THE MESSAGE (cont’d) • STYLE (How to Say It): • CLEAR: Simply worded is best • SPECIFIC: Precise & non-ambiguous • ACCURATE: Errors cause problems • CERTAIN: Authoritative and confident • CONSISTENT: • Externally: Explain changes from past messages & differences from what others are saying • Internally: Never say “attack will occur soon, don’t worry”

  49. FACTOR 2: CUES (Non-verbal Information) • Social Cues Help: • “Monkey see, monkey do” • What neighbors, friends, & relatives are doing • What organizations are doing • Physical Cues Help too: • If confirm the risk (rain in flood warnings)

  50. SOME HAZARDS (fire) HAVE CUES SOME (radiation) DON’T

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