Records |
Author |
Tinghao Zhang; Lida Huang; Tao Chen; Shuo Bai |
Title |
GIS Based Emergency Management Framework for Large-scale Events: A Case Study of the Torch Relay Activity |
Type |
Conference Article |
Year |
2021 |
Publication |
ISCRAM 2021 Conference Proceedings – 18th International Conference on Information Systems for Crisis Response and Management |
Abbreviated Journal |
Iscram 2021 |
Volume |
|
Issue |
|
Pages |
503-514 |
Keywords |
Arcgis, large-scale event, emergency management, epidemic prevention |
Abstract |
Due to the high popular concentration of large-scale events, once an emergency (like a stampede) occurs, it will often cause severe casualties. Moreover, since the widespread of the COVID-19, the prevention of the novel coronavirus should also be considered during mass gatherings. How to reduce the probability and potential consequence of emergencies is of great significance. This research designs an emergency management framework using ArcGIS-based geographic information technology for large-scale events. To verify the effectiveness of our framework, we take the Winter Olympic torch relay in university as an example. The paper is mainly divided into two parts, emergency resource allocation and the emergency prevention model. The former part focuses on the site selection of emergency sentries and emergency hospitals during the torch relay. In the latter part, an emergency prevention model is designed for two significant emergencies: stampede and epidemic. |
Address |
Tsinghua University; Tsinghua University; Tsinghua University; Tsinghua University; Tsinghua University Hefei |
Corporate Author |
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Thesis |
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Publisher |
Virginia Tech |
Place of Publication |
Blacksburg, VA (USA) |
Editor |
Anouck Adrot; Rob Grace; Kathleen Moore; Christopher W. Zobel |
Language |
English |
Summary Language |
English |
Original Title |
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Series Editor |
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Series Title |
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Abbreviated Series Title |
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Series Volume |
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Series Issue |
|
Edition |
|
ISSN |
978-1-949373-61-5 |
ISBN |
|
Medium |
|
Track |
Geospatial Technologies and Geographic Information Science for Crisis Management (GIS) |
Expedition |
|
Conference |
18th International Conference on Information Systems for Crisis Response and Management |
Notes |
zth19@mails.tsinghua.edu.cn |
Approved |
no |
Call Number |
ISCRAM @ idladmin @ |
Serial |
2351 |
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Author |
Cody Buntain; Richard Mccreadie; Ian Soboroff |
Title |
Incident Streams 2020: TRECIS in the Time of COVID-19 |
Type |
Conference Article |
Year |
2021 |
Publication |
ISCRAM 2021 Conference Proceedings – 18th International Conference on Information Systems for Crisis Response and Management |
Abbreviated Journal |
Iscram 2021 |
Volume |
|
Issue |
|
Pages |
621-639 |
Keywords |
Emergency Management, Crisis Informatics, Twitter, Categorization, Prioritization, COVID-19 |
Abstract |
Between 2018 and 2019, the Incident Streams track (TREC-IS) has developed standard approaches for classifying the types and criticality of information shared in online social spaces during crises, but the introduction of SARS-CoV-2 has shifted the landscape of online crises substantially. While prior editions of TREC-IS have lacked data on large-scale public-health emergencies as these events are exceedingly rare, COVID-19 has introduced an over-abundance of potential data, and significant open questions remain about how existing approaches to crisis informatics and datasets built on other emergencies adapt to this new context. This paper describes how the 2020 edition of TREC-IS has addressed these dual issues by introducing a new COVID-19-specific task for evaluating generalization of existing COVID-19 annotation and system performance to this new context, applied to 11 regions across the globe. TREC-IS has also continued expanding its set of target crises, adding 29 new events and expanding the collection of event types to include explosions, fires, and general storms, making for a total of 9 event types in addition to the new COVID-19 events. Across these events, TREC-IS has made available 478,110 COVID-related messages and 282,444 crisis-related messages for participant systems to analyze, of which 14,835 COVID-related and 19,784 crisis-related messages have been manually annotated. Analyses of these new datasets and participant systems demonstrate first that both the distributions of information type and priority of information vary between general crises and COVID-19-related discussion. Secondly, despite these differences, results suggest leveraging general crisis data in the COVID-19 context improves performance over baselines. Using these results, we provide guidance on which information types appear most consistent between general crises and COVID-19. |
Address |
New Jersey Institute of Technology; University of Glasgow; National Institute of Standards and Technology |
Corporate Author |
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Thesis |
|
Publisher |
Virginia Tech |
Place of Publication |
Blacksburg, VA (USA) |
Editor |
Anouck Adrot; Rob Grace; Kathleen Moore; Christopher W. Zobel |
Language |
English |
Summary Language |
English |
Original Title |
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Series Editor |
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Series Title |
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Abbreviated Series Title |
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Series Volume |
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Series Issue |
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Edition |
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ISSN |
978-1-949373-61-5 |
ISBN |
|
Medium |
|
Track |
Social Media for Disaster Response and Resilience |
Expedition |
|
Conference |
18th International Conference on Information Systems for Crisis Response and Management |
Notes |
cbuntain@njit.edu |
Approved |
no |
Call Number |
ISCRAM @ idladmin @ |
Serial |
2360 |
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Author |
Massimo Cossentino; Davide; rea Guastella; Salvatore Lopes; Luca Sabatucci; Mario Tripiciano |
Title |
From Textual Emergency Procedures to Executable Plans |
Type |
Conference Article |
Year |
2022 |
Publication |
ISCRAM 2022 Conference Proceedings – 19th International Conference on Information Systems for Crisis Response and Management |
Abbreviated Journal |
Iscram 2022 |
Volume |
|
Issue |
|
Pages |
200-212 |
Keywords |
Emergency management; Disaster response; Modelling Notation |
Abstract |
Crisis response and management often involve joint actions among different actors. This is particularly true in cross border cooperation, i.e. when actors belong to different countries. This is the operative context of the NETTUNIT research project, which long-term objective is to provide automatic support to emergency management. Modelling emergency plans is challenging because they are usually written in free-form text, thus in a form that is very far from being automatically processed and executed. In other words, it is non-trivial to define workflows capable of managing and monitoring emergency plans. To complicate the problem, typically an emergency evolves in a highly dynamic environment, so there is the need for run-time adaptation. In this paper, we propose a roadmap for producing executable workflows from emergency free-text plans. We set up our current progress in the project and focus on the sub-problem of identifying a suitable modelling notation. We also propose two improvements with respect to the state of the art: 1) a specific diagram focusing on events, roles and responsibilities in a goal-oriented fashion; 2) some guidelines for depicting the emergency plan at hand with a modelling notation. |
Address |
Italian National Research Council; Italian National Research Council; Italian National Research Council; Italian National Research Council; Italian National Research Council |
Corporate Author |
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Thesis |
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Publisher |
|
Place of Publication |
Tarbes, France |
Editor |
Rob Grace; Hossein Baharmand |
Language |
English |
Summary Language |
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Original Title |
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Series Editor |
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Series Title |
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Abbreviated Series Title |
|
Series Volume |
|
Series Issue |
|
Edition |
|
ISSN |
2411-3387 |
ISBN |
978-82-8427-099-9 |
Medium |
|
Track |
Applications, Tools and Components for Crisis Management |
Expedition |
|
Conference |
|
Notes |
|
Approved |
no |
Call Number |
ISCRAM @ idladmin @ |
Serial |
2410 |
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Author |
Cody Buntain; Richard Mccreadie; Ian Soboroff |
Title |
Incident Streams 2021 Off the Deep End: Deeper Annotations and Evaluations in Twitter |
Type |
Conference Article |
Year |
2022 |
Publication |
ISCRAM 2022 Conference Proceedings – 19th International Conference on Information Systems for Crisis Response and Management |
Abbreviated Journal |
Iscram 2022 |
Volume |
|
Issue |
|
Pages |
584-604 |
Keywords |
Emergency Management; Crisis Informatics; Twitter; Categorization; Priorization; Multi-Modal; Public Safety; PSCR; TREC |
Abstract |
This paper summarizes the final year of the four-year Text REtrieval Conference Incident Streams track (TREC-IS), which has produced a large dataset comprising 136,263 annotated tweets, spanning 98 crisis events. Goals of this final year were twofold: 1) to add new categories for assessing messages, with a focus on characterizing the audience, author, and images associated with these messages, and 2) to enlarge the TREC-IS dataset with new events, with an emphasis of deeper pools for sampling. Beyond these two goals, TREC-IS has nearly doubled the number of annotated messages per event for the 26 crises introduced in 2021 and has released a new parallel dataset of 312,546 images associated with crisis content – with 7,297 tweets having annotations about their embedded images. Our analyses of this new crisis data yields new insights about the context of a tweet; e.g., messages intended for a local audience and those that contain images of weather forecasts and infographics have higher than average assessments of priority but are relatively rare. Tweets containing images, however, have higher perceived priorities than tweets without images. Moving to deeper pools, while tending to lower classification performance, also does not generally impact performance rankings or alter distributions of information-types. We end this paper with a discussion of these datasets, analyses, their implications, and how they contribute both new data and insights to the broader crisis informatics community. |
Address |
University of Maryland, College Park (UMD); University of Glasgow; National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) |
Corporate Author |
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Thesis |
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Publisher |
|
Place of Publication |
Tarbes, France |
Editor |
Rob Grace; Hossein Baharmand |
Language |
English |
Summary Language |
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Original Title |
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Series Editor |
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Series Title |
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Abbreviated Series Title |
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Series Volume |
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Series Issue |
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Edition |
|
ISSN |
2411-3387 |
ISBN |
978-82-8427-099-9 |
Medium |
|
Track |
Social Media for Crisis Management |
Expedition |
|
Conference |
|
Notes |
|
Approved |
no |
Call Number |
ISCRAM @ idladmin @ |
Serial |
2441 |
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|
Author |
Rob Grace; Michelle Potts |
Title |
Opportunities for Multisensor Integration in Public-Safety Answering Points |
Type |
Conference Article |
Year |
2022 |
Publication |
ISCRAM 2022 Conference Proceedings – 19th International Conference on Information Systems for Crisis Response and Management |
Abbreviated Journal |
Iscram 2022 |
Volume |
|
Issue |
|
Pages |
895-904 |
Keywords |
Emergency response; sensemaking; public safety; remote sensing; emergency management |
Abstract |
Public-Safety Answering Points (PSAPs) coordinate emergency response by gathering critical information from 911 callers for dispatch to first responders. However, PSAPs fail to gather this information if 911 callers are unable, unwilling, or unavailable to report key details about an emergency. To address this problem, early-adopter PSAPs employ communication specialists to gather multimedia information from multiple sensing tools, including automated alarms, cameras, government databases, location systems, open-source websites, social media, and alternative communication channels such as text-to-911. Using preliminary usage data from an early- adopter PSAP, this study identifies 11 breakdowns in 911 call taking that create opportunities for multisensor integration. This study then characterizes use cases for multisensor tools based on usage patterns observed across five incident types. These findings highlight multisensor integration as a critical area for crisis informatics research. |
Address |
Texas Tech University; Chandler Police Department |
Corporate Author |
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Thesis |
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Publisher |
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Place of Publication |
Tarbes, France |
Editor |
Rob Grace; Hossein Baharmand |
Language |
English |
Summary Language |
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Original Title |
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Series Editor |
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Series Title |
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Abbreviated Series Title |
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Series Volume |
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Series Issue |
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Edition |
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ISSN |
2411-3387 |
ISBN |
978-82-8427-099-9 |
Medium |
|
Track |
Visions for Future Crisis Management |
Expedition |
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Conference |
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Notes |
|
Approved |
no |
Call Number |
ISCRAM @ idladmin @ |
Serial |
2464 |
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Author |
Leorey Marquez; Pawan Gamage; Dhirendra Singh; Vincent Lemiale; Trevor Dess; Peter Ashton; Luke Ryan |
Title |
SEEKER: A Web-Based Simulation Tool for Planning Community Evacuations |
Type |
Conference Article |
Year |
2023 |
Publication |
Proceedings of the ISCRAM Asia Pacific Conference 2022 |
Abbreviated Journal |
Proc. ISCRAM AP 2022 |
Volume |
|
Issue |
|
Pages |
8-24 |
Keywords |
Evacuation Modelling; Emergency Management; Decision Support Systems; Agent-Based Simulation |
Abstract |
Bushfires cause widespread devastation in Australia, one of the most fire-prone countries on earth. Bushfire seasons are also becoming longer and outbreaks of severe bushfires are occurring more often. This creates the problem of having more people at risk in very diverse areas resulting in more difficult mass evacuations over time. The Barwon Otway region in Victoria’s Surf Coast Shire is one such area with evacuation challenges due to its limited routes in and out of coastal areas and its massive population surges during the tourist season and holiday periods. The increasing gravity of the bushfire threat to the region has brought about the Great Ocean Road Decision Support System (GOR-DSS) project, and the subsequent development of a disaster evacuation tool to support emergency management organisations assess evacuation and risk mitigation options. This paper describes the design and development of SEEKER (Simulations of Emergency Evacuations for Knowledge, Education and Response). The SEEKER tool adds another level of intelligence to the evacuation response by incorporating agent-based modelling and allows emergency management agencies to design and run evacuation scenarios and analyse the risk posed by the fire to the population and road network. Furthermore, SEEKER can be used to develop multiple evacuation scenarios to investigate and compare the effectiveness of each emergency evacuation plan. This paper also discusses the application of SEEKER in a case study, community engagement, and training. |
Address |
CSIRO Data61; RMIT University; RMIT University; CSIRO Data61; DELWP; DELWP; Mount Alexander Shire Council |
Corporate Author |
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Thesis |
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Publisher |
Massey Unversity |
Place of Publication |
Palmerston North, New Zealand |
Editor |
Thomas J. Huggins, V.L. |
Language |
English |
Summary Language |
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Original Title |
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Series Editor |
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Series Title |
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Abbreviated Series Title |
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Series Volume |
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Series Issue |
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Edition |
|
ISSN |
2411-3387 |
ISBN |
978-0-473-66845-7 |
Medium |
|
Track |
Analytical Modelling and Simulation |
Expedition |
|
Conference |
|
Notes |
|
Approved |
no |
Call Number |
ISCRAM @ idladmin @ |
Serial |
2476 |
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|
|
Author |
Randal A. Collins |
Title |
Adaptation: A Proposal to Replace Recovery in the Phases of Emergency Management |
Type |
Conference Article |
Year |
2023 |
Publication |
Proceedings of the ISCRAM Asia Pacific Conference 2022 |
Abbreviated Journal |
Proc. ISCRAM AP 2022 |
Volume |
|
Issue |
|
Pages |
130-137 |
Keywords |
Adaptation; Recovery; Change; Disaster; Emergency Management; Transformation; Resilience |
Abstract |
Mitigation, preparedness, response, and recovery are the four phases of emergency management that have arguably been unchanged since their inception nearly 43 years ago. This paper proposes to replace recovery with adaptation as the post incident phase of emergency management. Recovery focuses on a return to normal while adaptation better encompasses acknowledgement, healing, strengthening, and improving quality of life for a more resilient outcome. This paper reviews seminal work within emergency management and work pertaining to other types of adaptation to better comprehend adaptation as applied to emergency management. |
Address |
Foundation for the Research and Advancement of Emergency Management |
Corporate Author |
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Thesis |
|
Publisher |
Massey Unversity |
Place of Publication |
Palmerston North, New Zealand |
Editor |
Thomas J. Huggins, V.L. |
Language |
English |
Summary Language |
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Original Title |
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Series Editor |
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Series Title |
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Abbreviated Series Title |
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Series Volume |
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Series Issue |
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Edition |
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ISSN |
2411-3387 |
ISBN |
978-0-473-66845-7 |
Medium |
|
Track |
Building Disaster Resilience |
Expedition |
|
Conference |
|
Notes |
|
Approved |
no |
Call Number |
ISCRAM @ idladmin @ |
Serial |
2487 |
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|
|
Author |
Rob Grace; Sanjana Gautam; Andrea Tapia |
Title |
Continuity of Operations Planning in Public-Safety Answering Points during the COVID-19 Pandemic |
Type |
Conference Article |
Year |
2023 |
Publication |
Proceedings of the ISCRAM Asia Pacific Conference 2022 |
Abbreviated Journal |
Proc. ISCRAM AP 2022 |
Volume |
|
Issue |
|
Pages |
173-180 |
Keywords |
Emergency Management; Business Continuity Planning; Critical Infrastructure; Resilience |
Abstract |
Continuity of Operations (COOP) planning helps ensure that municipal agencies maintain essential functions when disasters threaten critical infrastructures. COOP planning is especially important for Public-Safety Answering Points (PSAPs), which must continue to answer 911 calls and dispatch first responders during crises. However, COOP planning guidelines often focus on threats to cyber-physical infrastructures rather than outbreaks of infectious disease that threaten the human work arrangements—social infrastructures—agencies rely on to perform essential functions. This study reports preliminary findings from interviews with U.S. PSAP officials who developed plans to decentralize 911 facilities, networks, and personnel to maintain essential functions during the COVID-19 pandemic. These findings suggest revisions to COOP planning guidelines that consider requirements for redundant, diverse, and interdependent cyber-physical-social infrastructures. |
Address |
Texas Tech University; Pennsylvania State University; Pennsylvania State University |
Corporate Author |
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Thesis |
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Publisher |
Massey Unversity |
Place of Publication |
Palmerston North, New Zealand |
Editor |
Thomas J. Huggins, V.L. |
Language |
English |
Summary Language |
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Original Title |
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Series Editor |
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Series Title |
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Abbreviated Series Title |
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Series Volume |
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Series Issue |
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Edition |
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ISSN |
2411-3387 |
ISBN |
978-0-473-66845-7 |
Medium |
|
Track |
Building Disaster Resilience |
Expedition |
|
Conference |
|
Notes |
|
Approved |
no |
Call Number |
ISCRAM @ idladmin @ |
Serial |
2491 |
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|
|
Author |
Renán T. Rodríguez; Víctor A. Bañuls |
Title |
Challenges of Emergency Management Digital Transformation in Industrial Parks |
Type |
Conference Article |
Year |
2023 |
Publication |
Proceedings of the ISCRAM Asia Pacific Conference 2022 |
Abbreviated Journal |
Proc. ISCRAM AP 2022 |
Volume |
|
Issue |
|
Pages |
196-203 |
Keywords |
Digital Transformation; Safety; Industrial Parks; Emergency Management; Simulation |
Abstract |
Industrial parks are economic drivers of the cities where they are located. These parks are constantly at risk of catastrophe due to the diversity of industries and the dangerous materials used in their production processes. Despite this constant threat, there is a digitization shortfall in the emergency management process in industrial parks. This research paper seeks to describe the importance of digital transformation in industrial parks, as well as, how information systems can contribute to proper emergency management. Based on the preliminary analysis of the literature, it was possible to determine how the implementation of an emergency system would facilitate the prevention of catastrophes according to the analysis of scenarios, simulation, management, and proper coordination of emergencies in real-time. However, the proper functioning of this system depends on the implementation of environmental innovation, exploration, and observation skills, without neglecting the commitment of organizations and their material, human and technological resources to achieve a significant change. |
Address |
Catholic University of Cuenca; University Pablo de Olavide |
Corporate Author |
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Thesis |
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Publisher |
Massey Unversity |
Place of Publication |
Palmerston North, New Zealand |
Editor |
Thomas J. Huggins, V.L. |
Language |
English |
Summary Language |
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Original Title |
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Series Editor |
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Series Title |
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Abbreviated Series Title |
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Series Volume |
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Series Issue |
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Edition |
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ISSN |
2411-3387 |
ISBN |
978-0-473-66845-7 |
Medium |
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Track |
Information Systems for Emergency Management |
Expedition |
|
Conference |
|
Notes |
|
Approved |
no |
Call Number |
ISCRAM @ idladmin @ |
Serial |
2493 |
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Author |
Tsai, C.-H.; Rayi, P.; Kadire, S.; Wang, Y.-F.; Krafka, S.; Zendejas, E.; Chen, Y.-C. |
Title |
Co-Design Disaster Management Chatbot with Indigenous Communities |
Type |
Conference Article |
Year |
2023 |
Publication |
Proceedings of the 20th International ISCRAM Conference |
Abbreviated Journal |
Iscram 2023 |
Volume |
|
Issue |
|
Pages |
1-12 |
Keywords |
Native American; Emergency Management; Artificial intelligence; Conversational Agent; Human-Centered Computing |
Abstract |
Indigenous communities are disproportionately impacted by rising disaster risk, climate change, and environmental degradation due to their close relationship with the environment and its resources. Unfortunately, gathering the necessary information or evidence to request or co-share sufficient funds can be challenging for indigenous people and their lands. This paper aims to co-design an AI-based chatbot with two tribes and investigate their perception and experience of using it in disaster reporting practices. The study was conducted in two stages. Firstly, we interviewed experienced first-line emergency managers and invited tribal members to an in-person design workshop. Secondly, based on qualitative analysis, we identified three themes of emergency communication, documentation, and user experience. Our findings support that indigenous communities favored the proposed Emergency Reporter chatbot solution. We further discussed how the proposed chatbot could empower the tribes in disaster management, preserve sovereignty, and seek support from other agencies. |
Address |
Technical University of Darmstadt |
Corporate Author |
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Thesis |
|
Publisher |
University of Nebraska at Omaha |
Place of Publication |
Omaha, USA |
Editor |
Jaziar Radianti; Ioannis Dokas; Nicolas Lalone; Deepak Khazanchi |
Language |
English |
Summary Language |
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Original Title |
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Series Editor |
Hosssein Baharmand |
Series Title |
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Abbreviated Series Title |
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Series Volume |
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Series Issue |
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Edition |
1 |
ISSN |
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ISBN |
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Medium |
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Track |
Usability and Universal Design of ICT for Emergency Management |
Expedition |
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Conference |
|
Notes |
http://dx.doi.org/10.59297/RZLJ7481 |
Approved |
no |
Call Number |
ISCRAM @ idladmin @ |
Serial |
2501 |
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Author |
Petrenj, B.; Piraina, M.; Borghetti, F.; Marchionni, G.; Urbano, V. |
Title |
Cross-border Digital Platform for Transport Critical Infrastructure Resilience: Functionalities and Use Case |
Type |
Conference Article |
Year |
2023 |
Publication |
Proceedings of the 20th International ISCRAM Conference |
Abbreviated Journal |
Iscram 2023 |
Volume |
|
Issue |
|
Pages |
96-111 |
Keywords |
Critical Infrastructure; Cross-border; Information-sharing; Transport; ICT platform; Resilience; Use-case; Emergency management |
Abstract |
The resilience of increasingly interdependent Critical Infrastructure (CI) systems hugely depends on the stakeholder organizations’ ability to exchange information and coordinate, while CI’s cross-border dimension further increases the complexity and challenges. This paper presents the progress in the Lombardy Region (Italy) and Canton Ticino (Switzerland) on the joint capacity to manage disruptive events involving transportation CI between the two countries. We present a cross-border digital platform (Critical Infrastructure Platform – PIC) and its main functionalities for improved cross-border risk and resilience management of CI. A use case, based on a scenario of an intense snowfall along the transboundary motorway impacting both countries, demonstrates how PIC advances the exchange of information, its visualization and analysis in real-time. The use case also shows the practical value of the digital platform and its potential to support the management of cross-border events (and their cascading events) that require the cooperation of Italian and Swiss actors. |
Address |
Politecnico di Milano, School of Management; Politecnico di Milano, School of Management; Politecnico di Milano, Mobililty and Transport Laboratory; Politecnico di Milano, Mobililty and Transport Laboratory; Aria S.p.A., Lombardy Region |
Corporate Author |
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Thesis |
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Publisher |
University of Nebraska at Omaha |
Place of Publication |
Omaha, USA |
Editor |
Jaziar Radianti; Ioannis Dokas; Nicolas Lalone; Deepak Khazanchi |
Language |
English |
Summary Language |
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Original Title |
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Series Editor |
Hosssein Baharmand |
Series Title |
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Abbreviated Series Title |
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Series Volume |
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Series Issue |
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Edition |
1 |
ISSN |
|
ISBN |
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Medium |
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Track |
Enhancing Protection of Critical Infrastructures |
Expedition |
|
Conference |
|
Notes |
http://dx.doi.org/10.59297/OSFA3002 |
Approved |
no |
Call Number |
ISCRAM @ idladmin @ |
Serial |
2510 |
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Author |
LaLone, N.; Dugas, P.O.T.; Semaan, B. |
Title |
The Crisis of Designing for Disaster: How to Help Emergency Management During The Technology Crisis We Created |
Type |
Conference Article |
Year |
2023 |
Publication |
Proceedings of the 20th International ISCRAM Conference |
Abbreviated Journal |
Iscram 2023 |
Volume |
|
Issue |
|
Pages |
126-143 |
Keywords |
Crisis Informatics; Participatory Design; Ethnography Emergency Management; Please Stop Trying to Make Fetch Happen |
Abstract |
Emergency Management (EM) is experiencing a crisis of technology as technologists have attempted to innovate standard operating procedures with minimal input from EM. Unsurprisingly, there has yet to be a success. Instead, technologists have focused on consumer culture and fostered a slow-moving crisis as the gap between what consumers and EM can do is deep. At present, the most ubiquitous aspect of technology in disaster is its capacity to exacerbate response, create new kinds of disaster, and create consumer expectations that EM cannot meet. In the present work, we highlight how and why technological production needs to shift its ontological premises dramatically to meet the needs of technology for first responders. From supporting practice to taking a few steps back from the bleeding edge, we offer a range of suggestions based on the technological capacities of emergency management in the present and in the future. |
Address |
University of Nebraska at Omaha; New Mexico State University; University of Colorado Boulder Affiliation |
Corporate Author |
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Thesis |
|
Publisher |
University of Nebraska at Omaha |
Place of Publication |
Omaha, USA |
Editor |
Jaziar Radianti; Ioannis Dokas; Nicolas Lalone; Deepak Khazanchi |
Language |
English |
Summary Language |
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Original Title |
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Series Editor |
Hosssein Baharmand |
Series Title |
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Abbreviated Series Title |
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Series Volume |
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Series Issue |
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Edition |
1 |
ISSN |
|
ISBN |
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Medium |
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Track |
Technologies for First Responders |
Expedition |
|
Conference |
|
Notes |
http://dx.doi.org/10.59297/IUGT6097 |
Approved |
no |
Call Number |
ISCRAM @ idladmin @ |
Serial |
2512 |
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Author |
McCreadie, R.; Buntain, C. |
Title |
CrisisFACTS: Buidling and Evaluating Crisis Timelines |
Type |
Conference Article |
Year |
2023 |
Publication |
Proceedings of the 20th International ISCRAM Conference |
Abbreviated Journal |
Iscram 2023 |
Volume |
|
Issue |
|
Pages |
320-339 |
Keywords |
Emergency Management; Crisis Informatics News; Twitter; Facebook; Reddit; Wikipedia; Summarization |
Abstract |
Between 2018 and 2021, the Incident Streams track (TREC-IS) developed standard approaches for classifying information types and criticality of tweets during crises. While successful in producing substantial collections of labeled data, TREC-IS as a data challenge had several limitations: It only evaluated information at type-level rather than what was reported; it only used Twitter data; and it lacked measures of redundancy in system output. This paper introduces Crisis Facts and Cross-Stream Temporal Summarization (CrisisFACTS), a new data challenge piloted in 2022 and developed to address these limitations. The CrisisFACTS framework recasts TREC-IS into an event-summarization task using multiple disaster-relevant data streams and a new fact-based evaluation scheme, allowing the community to assess state-of-the-art methods for summarizing disaster events Results from CrisisFACTS in 2022 include a new test-collection comprising human-generated disaster summaries along with multi-platform datasets of social media, crisis reports and news coverage for major crisis events. |
Address |
University of Glasgow; University of Maryland, College Park (UMD) |
Corporate Author |
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Thesis |
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Publisher |
University of Nebraska at Omaha |
Place of Publication |
Omaha, USA |
Editor |
Jaziar Radianti; Ioannis Dokas; Nicolas Lalone; Deepak Khazanchi |
Language |
English |
Summary Language |
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Original Title |
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Series Editor |
Hosssein Baharmand |
Series Title |
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Abbreviated Series Title |
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Series Volume |
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Series Issue |
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Edition |
1 |
ISSN |
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ISBN |
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Medium |
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Track |
Social Media for Crisis Management |
Expedition |
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Conference |
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Notes |
http://dx.doi.org/10.59297/JVQZ9405 |
Approved |
no |
Call Number |
ISCRAM @ idladmin @ |
Serial |
2529 |
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Author |
Grace, R.; Montarnal, A.; Petitdemange, E.; Rutter, J.; Rodriguez, G.R.; Potts, M. |
Title |
Collaborative Information Seeking during a 911 Call Surge: A Case Study |
Type |
Conference Article |
Year |
2023 |
Publication |
Proceedings of the 20th International ISCRAM Conference |
Abbreviated Journal |
Iscram 2023 |
Volume |
|
Issue |
|
Pages |
649-662 |
Keywords |
Emergency Communications; Information Seeking; Emergency Management; Crisis Informatics |
Abstract |
This case study examines collaborative information seeking in a public-safety answering point during a 911 call surge that occurred when a man fired an assault rifle at police officers and evaded capture for nearly an hour in March 2020. Overwhelmed by questionable and imprecise reports from 911 callers, telecommunicators and on scene responders began working together to conduct broad and deep searches for the shooter. Whereas broad searches improved the scope of information gathering by identifying multiple, albeit questionable and imprecise, reports of the suspect’s location, deep searches improved the quality of information gathering by investigating 911 callers’ reports using drone, helicopter, and patrol units. These findings suggest requirements for collaborative information seeking in public-safety answering points, including capabilities to conduct broad and deep searches using next-generation 911 technologies, and command and control requirements for triaging these search tasks within inter-organizational emergency response systems. |
Address |
Texas Tech University; IMT Mines Albi; Pennsylvania State University; Chandler Police Department |
Corporate Author |
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Thesis |
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Publisher |
University of Nebraska at Omaha |
Place of Publication |
Omaha, USA |
Editor |
Jaziar Radianti; Ioannis Dokas; Nicolas Lalone; Deepak Khazanchi |
Language |
English |
Summary Language |
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Original Title |
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Series Editor |
Hosssein Baharmand |
Series Title |
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Abbreviated Series Title |
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Series Volume |
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Series Issue |
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Edition |
1 |
ISSN |
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ISBN |
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Medium |
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Track |
Command and Control Studies |
Expedition |
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Conference |
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Notes |
http://dx.doi.org/10.59297/ZFAY5505 |
Approved |
no |
Call Number |
ISCRAM @ idladmin @ |
Serial |
2554 |
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Author |
Cossentino, M.; Guastella, D.A.; Lopes, S.; Sabatucci, L. |
Title |
Adaptive Execution of Workflows in Emergency Response |
Type |
Conference Article |
Year |
2023 |
Publication |
Proceedings of the 20th International ISCRAM Conference |
Abbreviated Journal |
Iscram 2023 |
Volume |
|
Issue |
|
Pages |
784-796 |
Keywords |
Emergency Management; Disaster Response; Adaptive Workflow Execution; Standard Operating Procedure (SOP) |
Abstract |
In emergencies, preparation is of paramount importance but it is not sufficient. As we know, emergency agencies develop extensive (text) plans to deal with accidents that could occur in their territories; their personnel train to enact such procedures, but, despite that, the unpredictable conditions that occur during an emergency require the ability to adapt the plan promptly. This paper deals with the last mile of a process we defined for enabling the adaptive execution of such emergency plans. In previous works, we discussed how to convert a free-text plan into a structured-text form, represent this plan using standard modelling notations, and extract goals that plans prescribe to be fulfilled. In this paper, we propose an approach for executing these plans with a workflow execution engine enriched by the capability to support runtime adaptation. |
Address |
National Research Council of Italy (CNR); Machine Learning Group Université Libre de Bruxelles; National Research Council of Italy (CNR); National Research Council of Italy (CNR) |
Corporate Author |
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Thesis |
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Publisher |
University of Nebraska at Omaha |
Place of Publication |
Omaha, USA |
Editor |
Jaziar Radianti; Ioannis Dokas; Nicolas Lalone; Deepak Khazanchi |
Language |
English |
Summary Language |
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Original Title |
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Series Editor |
Hosssein Baharmand |
Series Title |
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Abbreviated Series Title |
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Series Volume |
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Series Issue |
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Edition |
1 |
ISSN |
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ISBN |
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Medium |
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Track |
Applications, Tools, and Components for Crisis Management |
Expedition |
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Conference |
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Notes |
http://dx.doi.org/10.59297/ZOZS6664 |
Approved |
no |
Call Number |
ISCRAM @ idladmin @ |
Serial |
2566 |
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Author |
Rodriguez, R.; Bañuls, V.A. |
Title |
Designing collaborative emergency plans for enhancing resilience in urban business parks |
Type |
Conference Article |
Year |
2023 |
Publication |
Proceedings of the 20th International ISCRAM Conference |
Abbreviated Journal |
Iscram 2023 |
Volume |
|
Issue |
|
Pages |
1069-1069 |
Keywords |
Collaborative Emergency Planning; Business Parks; Emergency Management; Information Systems; Organizational Resilience |
Abstract |
Nowadays, emergency planning is an intangible business asset that allows companies to better face the possible catastrophic events they may be exposed to. The aim of the present study was to determine what collaborative emergency planning is and which elements must be considered in it, taking into account that the purpose of this type of planning is to help several organizations to work together in any emergency. The data were gathered through focus groups in an industrial area of Southern Europe that comprises more than 2,500 companies. The results obtained in this work allowed defining the reach of Collaborative Emergency Planning in business parks, as well as its basic functionalities, emergency scenarios and aggravating scenarios. Lastly, it was determined that Collaborative Emergency Planning is a tool for the construction of Organizational Resilience. |
Address |
Universidad Católica de Cuenca |
Corporate Author |
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Thesis |
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Publisher |
University of Nebraska at Omaha |
Place of Publication |
Omaha, USA |
Editor |
Jaziar Radianti; Ioannis Dokas; Nicolas Lalone; Deepak Khazanchi |
Language |
English |
Summary Language |
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Original Title |
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Series Editor |
Hosssein Baharmand |
Series Title |
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Abbreviated Series Title |
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Series Volume |
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Series Issue |
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Edition |
1 |
ISSN |
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ISBN |
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Medium |
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Track |
Poster |
Expedition |
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Conference |
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Notes |
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Approved |
no |
Call Number |
ISCRAM @ idladmin @ |
Serial |
2589 |
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