tornado risk and impact analysis using dasymetric modeling john d. crabtree, ph.d. department of...

13
Tornado Risk and Impact Tornado Risk and Impact Analysis Using Dasymetric Analysis Using Dasymetric Modeling Modeling John D. Crabtree, Ph.D. Department of Computer Science and Information Systems University of North Alabama

Upload: annabelle-harrington

Post on 19-Jan-2016

213 views

Category:

Documents


0 download

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Tornado Risk and Impact Analysis Using Dasymetric Modeling John D. Crabtree, Ph.D. Department of Computer Science and Information Systems University of

Tornado Risk and Impact Analysis Using Tornado Risk and Impact Analysis Using Dasymetric ModelingDasymetric Modeling

John D. Crabtree, Ph.D.Department of Computer Science and

Information SystemsUniversity of North Alabama

Page 2: Tornado Risk and Impact Analysis Using Dasymetric Modeling John D. Crabtree, Ph.D. Department of Computer Science and Information Systems University of

AbstractAbstract

Accurate information is critical to planners and first responders. Inaccuracies and inconsistencies can have a deleterious impact on disaster planning, preparedness, emergency response, disaster recovery and risk mitigation. This presentation demonstrates a technique that can be used to improve the quality of any population data set and its application to the analysis of eight years of tornado data from the National Weather Service. Population maps created from any data source (e.g., census tract, census block, tax assessment, etc.) can be intelligently disaggregated to create more accurate population distributions that can then be analyzed through the intersection of actual or projected risk polygons.

Page 3: Tornado Risk and Impact Analysis Using Dasymetric Modeling John D. Crabtree, Ph.D. Department of Computer Science and Information Systems University of

Problem StatementProblem Statement

• Accurate disaster maps are important– Facilitate emergency response efforts– Aid in disaster recovery– Improve risk mitigation and management

• Population data are critical in map creation• Common data analysis methods are poor

– FEMA HAZUS-MH algorithm excludes the entire census unit if the centroid of the unit is not within the risk area (e.g., tornado warning polygon)

Page 4: Tornado Risk and Impact Analysis Using Dasymetric Modeling John D. Crabtree, Ph.D. Department of Computer Science and Information Systems University of

Dasymetric MappingDasymetric Mapping

• Dasymetric: Russian transliteration of the Greek terms for density and measuring (dazimetricheskiy) translated into English

• Displays surface data by partitioning space into zones that represent the underlying surface variation

• Often used to disaggregate population data• Uses ancillary data set

Page 5: Tornado Risk and Impact Analysis Using Dasymetric Modeling John D. Crabtree, Ph.D. Department of Computer Science and Information Systems University of
Page 6: Tornado Risk and Impact Analysis Using Dasymetric Modeling John D. Crabtree, Ph.D. Department of Computer Science and Information Systems University of
Page 7: Tornado Risk and Impact Analysis Using Dasymetric Modeling John D. Crabtree, Ph.D. Department of Computer Science and Information Systems University of
Page 8: Tornado Risk and Impact Analysis Using Dasymetric Modeling John D. Crabtree, Ph.D. Department of Computer Science and Information Systems University of
Page 9: Tornado Risk and Impact Analysis Using Dasymetric Modeling John D. Crabtree, Ph.D. Department of Computer Science and Information Systems University of
Page 10: Tornado Risk and Impact Analysis Using Dasymetric Modeling John D. Crabtree, Ph.D. Department of Computer Science and Information Systems University of

41,635

94,298 62,138

Page 11: Tornado Risk and Impact Analysis Using Dasymetric Modeling John D. Crabtree, Ph.D. Department of Computer Science and Information Systems University of

Hot Spot AnalysisHot Spot Analysis

Page 12: Tornado Risk and Impact Analysis Using Dasymetric Modeling John D. Crabtree, Ph.D. Department of Computer Science and Information Systems University of

Current and Future ResearchCurrent and Future Research

• Statistical comparison of accuracy of density distribution– HAZUS-HM– Census Tract– Dasymetric– Census Block

• Compare dasymetric census block to property tax assessment data

• Compare various dasymetric algorithms

Page 13: Tornado Risk and Impact Analysis Using Dasymetric Modeling John D. Crabtree, Ph.D. Department of Computer Science and Information Systems University of

AcknowledgementsAcknowledgements

• Cameron Martin, Geography Student, University of North Alabama – Conference Poster Display

• Jeremy Mennis, Associate Professor, Temple University

• Torrin Hultgren, Graduate Student, University of Colorado