Integrating Place and Sense of Place into Geovisualizations of Hurricane Storm Surge Risk

IF 1.9 4区 地球科学 Q3 ENVIRONMENTAL STUDIES Weather Climate and Society Pub Date : 2023-10-01 DOI:10.1175/wcas-d-23-0044.1
O.V. Wilhelmi, B.C. Chamberlain, R.E. Morss, J.L. Demuth, H.D. Walpole, J. Boehnert, J.M. Gambill, H. Lazrus, J.G. Dobson
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Abstract

Abstract Geovisualizations play a central role in communicating hurricane storm surge risks to the public by connecting information about the hazard to a place. Meanwhile, people connect to places through meaning, functions, and emotional bond, known as a sense of place. The mixed-method approach presented in this paper focuses on the intersection of sense of place, geovisualization, and risk communication. We explored place meaning, scale of place, and place attachment in the coastal communities in Georgia and South Carolina. We conducted cognitive mapping focus groups and developed a series of geovisualizations of storm surge risk with varying representations of place. We then investigated people’s ability to connect visual storm surge information to a place and understand their risk by testing these geovisualizations in a large population survey ( n = 1442). We found that a 2D regional-scale map displayed together with a 3D abstract representation of a neighborhood was the most helpful in enabling people to relate to a place, quickly make sense of the information, and understand the risk. Our results showed that while the geovisualizations of storm surge risk can be effective generally, they were less effective in several important and vulnerable groups. We found substantial impacts of race, income, map-reading ability, place attachment, and scale of place on how people connected the storm surge risk shown in the visual to a place. These findings have implications for future research and for considering the way weather forecasters and emergency managers communicate storm surge information with diverse audiences using geovisualizations. Significance Statement Weather forecasters and emergency managers often use geovisualizations to communicate hurricane storm surge risks and threats to the public. Despite the important role that geovisualizations play, few studies have empirically investigated their effectiveness in hazardous weather risk communication. With the overarching goal of understanding how geovisualizations enable coastal residents to understand and respond to risk, we use an interdisciplinary approach to create new knowledge about the effectiveness of geovisualizations in storm surge risk communication. Our results show substantial impacts of sociodemographic factors across many of the measures that enable people to connect to a place through visualizations. These findings have implications for communicating geospatially varying risk to diverse audiences.
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将地点和地点感整合到飓风风暴潮风险的地理可视化中
地理可视化通过将有关危险的信息与一个地方联系起来,在向公众传达飓风风暴潮风险方面发挥着核心作用。与此同时,人们通过意义、功能和情感纽带与地方联系在一起,这被称为地方感。本文提出的混合方法侧重于地点感、地理可视化和风险沟通的交叉。我们探索了乔治亚州和南卡罗来纳州沿海社区的地方意义、地方规模和地方依恋。我们开展了认知地图焦点小组,并开发了一系列风暴潮风险的地理可视化,这些可视化具有不同的地点表示。然后,我们调查了人们将视觉风暴潮信息与一个地方联系起来的能力,并通过在大规模人口调查中测试这些地理可视化来了解他们的风险(n = 1442)。我们发现,2D区域比例图与3D社区抽象图一起显示,对于使人们与一个地方建立联系、快速理解信息并了解风险最有帮助。我们的研究结果表明,虽然风暴潮风险的地理可视化在一般情况下是有效的,但在一些重要和脆弱的群体中效果较差。我们发现种族、收入、地图阅读能力、地点依恋和地点规模对人们如何将视觉中显示的风暴潮风险与地点联系起来有实质性影响。这些发现对未来的研究和考虑天气预报员和应急管理人员使用地理可视化与不同受众交流风暴潮信息的方式具有启示意义。气象预报员和应急管理人员经常使用地理可视化向公众传达飓风风暴潮的风险和威胁。尽管地理可视化发挥着重要作用,但很少有研究对其在危险天气风险沟通中的有效性进行实证调查。以了解地理可视化如何使沿海居民了解和应对风险为首要目标,我们使用跨学科的方法来创建关于地理可视化在风暴潮风险沟通中的有效性的新知识。我们的研究结果显示,社会人口因素在许多方面都有重大影响,这些因素使人们能够通过可视化与一个地方建立联系。这些发现对向不同的受众传达地理空间上不同的风险具有启示意义。
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来源期刊
Weather Climate and Society
Weather Climate and Society METEOROLOGY & ATMOSPHERIC SCIENCES-
CiteScore
3.40
自引率
13.60%
发文量
95
审稿时长
>12 weeks
期刊介绍: Weather, Climate, and Society (WCAS) publishes research that encompasses economics, policy analysis, political science, history, and institutional, social, and behavioral scholarship relating to weather and climate, including climate change. Contributions must include original social science research, evidence-based analysis, and relevance to the interactions of weather and climate with society.
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