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Leveraging social networks for efficient hurricane evacuation
Institution:1. Department of Industrial and Manufacturing Engineering, Pennsylvania State University, United States;2. Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering, Pennsylvania State University, United States;1. Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University, Daytona Beach, FL 32114, USA;2. University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, PA 15260, USA;1. Jiangsu Key Laboratory of Urban ITS, Jiangsu Province Collaborative Innovation Center of Modern Urban Traffic Technologies, School of Transportation, Southeast University, Nanjing 211189, China;2. Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering, National University of Singapore, Singapore 117576, Singapore;1. Department of Political Science College of Charleston, United States;2. Department of Political Science, International Affairs, and Public Administration, East Tennessee State University, United States
Abstract:One of the important factors affecting evacuation performance is the departure time choices made by evacuees. Simultaneous departures of evacuees can lead to overloading of road networks causing congestion. We are especially interested in cases when evacuees subject to little or no risk of exposure evacuate along with evacuees subject to higher risk of threat (also known as shadow evacuation). One of the reasons for correlated evacuee departures is higher perceived risk of threat spread through social contacts. In this work, we study an evacuation scenario consisting of a high risk region and a surrounding low risk area. We propose a probabilistic evacuee departure time model incorporating both evacuee individual characteristics and the underlying evacuee social network. We find that the performance of an evacuation process can be improved by forcing a small subset of evacuees (inhibitors) in the low risk area to delay their departure. The performance of an evacuation is measured by both average travel time of the population and total evacuation time of the high risk evacuees. We derive closed form expressions for average travel time for ER random network. A detailed experimental analysis of various inhibitor selection strategies and their effectiveness on different social network topologies and risk distribution is performed. Results indicate that significant improvement in evacuation performance can be achieved in scenarios where evacuee social networks have short average path lengths and topologically influential evacuees do not belong to the high risk regions. Additionally, communities with stronger ties improve evacuation performance.
Keywords:Evacuation  Congestion  Social networks  Diffusion  Shadow evacuation  Departure time choice Models
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