ScholarGate
Assistente
Process / pipelineEvacuation / transportation hazard response

Evacuation Time Estimation Modeling

Evacuation time estimate (ETE) modeling predicts how long it will take to move an at-risk population to safety, a quantity central to emergency planning for hurricanes, floods, wildfires, nuclear plants, and other hazards. The method joins two ingredients: a behavioral component describing when households decide to leave — the mobilization or 'loading' curve, grounded in warning-response research such as the Protective Action Decision Model — and a transportation component describing how fast the road network can carry them away. Michael Lindell's EMBLEM2 exemplifies the empirically based approach, letting emergency managers compute ETEs from a modest set of route, behavioral, and scope parameters and even update them in real time as a hazard approaches. By combining human departure timing with network capacity, ETE modeling tells planners when to issue evacuation orders and where congestion will bind, turning evacuation from guesswork into quantified logistics.

Apri in MethodMindIn arrivoApplica, confronta, ottieni indicazioni
Strumenti e risorse
Scarica le diapositive
Impara ed esplora
VideoIn arrivo

Leggi il metodo completo

Riservato ai membri

Accedi con un account gratuito per leggere questa sezione.

Accedi

Mappa dei metodi

Il vicinato dei metodi correlati — seleziona un nodo per esplorare.

Fonti

  1. Lindell, M. K. (2008). EMBLEM2: An empirically based large scale evacuation time estimate model. Transportation Research Part A: Policy and Practice, 42(1), 140-154. DOI: 10.1016/j.tra.2007.06.014
  2. Lindell, M. K., & Perry, R. W. (2012). The Protective Action Decision Model: Theoretical Modifications and Additional Evidence. Risk Analysis, 32(4), 616-632. DOI: 10.1111/j.1539-6924.2011.01647.x

Come citare questa pagina

ScholarGate. (2026, June 23). Evacuation Time Estimate (ETE) Modeling. ScholarGate. https://scholargate.app/it/disaster-studies/evacuation-time-estimation-modeling

Quale metodo?

Affianca questo metodo ai suoi parenti più prossimi e leggili fianco a fianco — la biblioteca dispone i libri sul tavolo; la scelta è tua.

Confronta affiancati

Citato da

ScholarGateEvacuation Time Estimation Modeling (Evacuation Time Estimate (ETE) Modeling). Consultato il 2026-06-24 da https://scholargate.app/it/disaster-studies/evacuation-time-estimation-modeling · Insieme di dati: https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.20539026