Joshua J. Hatzis, Ph.D., Jooho Kim, Ph.D., and Kim E. Klockow-McClain, Ph.D.
Natural Hazards Review
November 17, 2023
Tornadoes represent a significant threat to life and property and tend to evoke protective action in most people. Studies have suggested that many people travel to the nearest storm shelter or flee the area, rather than sheltering-in-place as recommended by the National Weather Service. While shelter-in-place is the recommendation of the National Weather Service, for tornado safety, few studies have quantified the risk reduction when compared to traveling to a storm shelter or fleeing the area. To address this knowledge gap, we developed an agent-based model, the Tornado Warning-Induced Shelter, Travel, and Evacuation Response Agent-Based
Model (TWISTER ABM), to simulate protective action behaviors in the city of Norman, Oklahoma under eight protective action scenarios including:
We found that, for an EF5 tornado hitting Norman at rush hour, the overall fatality rates by protective action type were 0.6% for those who took no action, 0.3% for those who sought refuge, 1.5% for those who sought shelter, and 1.1% for those fleeing the area. We also found that fatality rates were reduced by a factor of 6.6 for scenario 6 (shelter-in-place) over scenario 7 (travel to a FEMA-rated shelter). We believe that models such as TWISTER ABM can be used by the NWS and Emergency Managers in their attempts at communicating the effectiveness of shelter-in place.
Online Source: https://ascelibrary.org/doi/10.1061/NHREFO.NHENG-1783