TY - JOUR
T1 - A mental models study of hurricane forecast and warning production, communication, and decision-making
AU - Bostrom, Ann
AU - Morss, Rebecca E.
AU - Lazo, Jeffrey K.
AU - Demuth, Julie L.
AU - Lazrus, Heather
AU - Hudson, Rebecca
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2016 American Meteorological Society.
PY - 2016/4
Y1 - 2016/4
N2 - The study reported here explores how to enhance the public value of hurricane forecast and warning information by examining the entire warning process. A mental models research approach is applied to address three risk management tasks critical to warnings for extreme weather events: 1) understanding the risk decision and action context for hurricane warnings, 2) understanding the commonalities and conflicts in interpretations of that context and associated risks, and 3) exploring the practical implications of these insights for hurricane risk communication and management. To understand the risk decision and action context, the study develops a decision-focusedmodel of the hurricane forecast andwarning system on the basis of results from individualmental models interviews with forecasters from the National Hurricane Center (n 5 4) and the Miami-South Florida Weather Forecast Office (n 5 4), media broadcasters (n 5 5), and public officials (n 5 6), as well as a group decision-modeling session with a subset of the forecasters. Comparisons across professionals reveal numerous shared perceptions, as well as some critical differences. Implications for improving extreme weather event forecast and warning systems and risk communication are threefold: 1) promote thinking about forecast and warning decisions as a system, with informal as well as formal elements; 2) evaluate, coordinate, and consider controlling the proliferation of forecast and warning information products; and 3) further examine the interpretation and representation of uncertainty within the hurricane forecast and warning system as well as for users.
AB - The study reported here explores how to enhance the public value of hurricane forecast and warning information by examining the entire warning process. A mental models research approach is applied to address three risk management tasks critical to warnings for extreme weather events: 1) understanding the risk decision and action context for hurricane warnings, 2) understanding the commonalities and conflicts in interpretations of that context and associated risks, and 3) exploring the practical implications of these insights for hurricane risk communication and management. To understand the risk decision and action context, the study develops a decision-focusedmodel of the hurricane forecast andwarning system on the basis of results from individualmental models interviews with forecasters from the National Hurricane Center (n 5 4) and the Miami-South Florida Weather Forecast Office (n 5 4), media broadcasters (n 5 5), and public officials (n 5 6), as well as a group decision-modeling session with a subset of the forecasters. Comparisons across professionals reveal numerous shared perceptions, as well as some critical differences. Implications for improving extreme weather event forecast and warning systems and risk communication are threefold: 1) promote thinking about forecast and warning decisions as a system, with informal as well as formal elements; 2) evaluate, coordinate, and consider controlling the proliferation of forecast and warning information products; and 3) further examine the interpretation and representation of uncertainty within the hurricane forecast and warning system as well as for users.
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/84962316622
U2 - 10.1175/WCAS-D-15-0033.1
DO - 10.1175/WCAS-D-15-0033.1
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:84962316622
SN - 1948-8327
VL - 8
SP - 111
EP - 129
JO - Weather, Climate, and Society
JF - Weather, Climate, and Society
IS - 2
ER -