3.9 Article

The wisdom of crowds for improved disaster resilience: a near-real-time analysis of crowdsourced social media data on the 2021 flood in Germany

Journal

GEOJOURNAL
Volume 88, Issue 4, Pages 4215-4241

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s10708-023-10858-x

Keywords

Transformative disaster resilience; Twitter; Online survey; Topic modeling; Latent Dirichlet Allocation; 2021 flood Germany

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Transformative disaster resilience in times of climate change requires reflexive governance, socio-technical advancement, co-creation of knowledge, and innovative and bottom-up approaches. Utilizing Web 2.0 knowledge sharing through online social networks can complement existing approaches, understand community dynamics, and incorporate collective intelligence into disaster resilience studies.
Transformative disaster resilience in times of climate change underscores the importance of reflexive governance, facilitation of socio-technical advancement, co-creation of knowledge, and innovative and bottom-up approaches. However, implementing these capacity-building processes by relying on census-based datasets and nomothetic (or top-down) approaches remains challenging for many jurisdictions. Web 2.0 knowledge sharing via online social networks, whereas, provides a unique opportunity and valuable data sources to complement existing approaches, understand dynamics within large communities of individuals, and incorporate collective intelligence into disaster resilience studies. Using Twitter data (passive crowdsourcing) and an online survey, this study draws on the wisdom of crowds and public judgment in near-real-time disaster phases when the flood disaster hit Germany in July 2021. Latent Dirichlet Allocation, an unsupervised machine learning technique for Topic Modeling, was applied to the corpora of two data sources to identify topics associated with different disaster phases. In addition to semantic (textual) analysis, spatiotemporal patterns of online disaster communication were analyzed to determine the contribution patterns associated with the affected areas. Finally, the extracted topics discussed online were compiled into five themes related to disaster resilience capacities (preventive, anticipative, absorptive, adaptive, and transformative). The near-real-time collective sensing approach reflected optimized diversity and a spectrum of people's experiences and knowledge regarding flooding disasters and highlighted communities' sociocultural characteristics. This bottom-up approach could be an innovative alternative to traditional participatory techniques of organizing meetings and workshops for situational analysis and timely unfolding of such events at a fraction of the cost to inform disaster resilience initiatives.

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