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Kim Klockow Doctoral candidate in Geography University of Oklahoma

Future of Severe and High Impact Weather Warnings (A) behavioral and social research perspective. Kim Klockow Doctoral candidate in Geography University of Oklahoma. WARN-ON-FORECAST AND HIGH IMPACT WEATHER WORKSHOP 2012. Introduction: Defining my perspective.

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Kim Klockow Doctoral candidate in Geography University of Oklahoma

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  1. Future of Severe and High Impact Weather Warnings(A) behavioral and social research perspective Kim Klockow Doctoral candidate in Geography University of Oklahoma WARN-ON-FORECAST AND HIGH IMPACT WEATHER WORKSHOP 2012

  2. Introduction: Defining my perspective • Behind the “social scientist” title • Behavioral & hazards geography • Meteorologist • Research areas • Risk perception research • Political scientists, risk communication scholars, economists • Dissertation: Mix ethnographic (anthropological) and cognitive (psychological) frameworks • In-depth interviews following April 27, 2011 tornado outbreak • Cognitive decision experiments using probabilistic information of different forms • Geographers are awesome integrators  WARN-ON-FORECAST AND HIGH IMPACT WEATHER WORKSHOP 2012

  3. Environmental perception and behavioral geography WARN-ON-FORECAST AND HIGH IMPACT WEATHER WORKSHOP 2012

  4. We were given prompts, none of which apply to me exactly. I’ll apply them to the lay public(s) to the extent I am able. A lot of this will be brainstorming! WARN-ON-FORECAST AND HIGH IMPACT WEATHER WORKSHOP 2012

  5. What are (their) roles/responsibilities (capabilities) in the current warning system? Important to keep in mind that people “responding” to warnings are: • Employees • Friends • Wives, sisters, sons, grandfathers • Busy • Distracted • Bound to culture(s), ideologies, and other ways of learning about the world than formal educational systems/programs WARN-ON-FORECAST AND HIGH IMPACT WEATHER WORKSHOP 2012

  6. What are their roles/responsibilities (capabilities) in the current warning system? Also note: Warning systems delivering these messages to people are shaped by an interaction of: • Local politics, preferences & infrastructure (think: sirens) • Top-down forces pushing information (NWS) * • Broadcast technologies available to pushers of weather information (to NWS, TV mets, etc.) • Resources/technologies/social support systems available to people to pull information WARN-ON-FORECAST AND HIGH IMPACT WEATHER WORKSHOP 2012

  7. How would nearly continuous warning updates change how they prepare? • How would information concerning forecaster confidence change how they prepare? A similar set of questions apply! A few questions: • How do people prepare now in a deterministic system? • Would people receive these continual updates, and if so, through what media? • “The medium is the message” WARN-ON-FORECAST AND HIGH IMPACT WEATHER WORKSHOP 2012

  8. What work must be completed to accommodate longer lead times? Not intended to be an exhaustive list, but a few ideas: • Take focus off “response” and place more on “situation awareness and understanding” • Step back from militaristic command-and-control mentality, reap great benefits from a more holistic perspective • Identify the underlying mechanisms for situation awareness and understanding in present system • Utilize social and behavioral frameworks of risk perception, information processing, fast decision-making under pressure, etc. • Market research-esque: Conduct experiments, focus groups, trial runs, etc. for new system using the original system as a control WARN-ON-FORECAST AND HIGH IMPACT WEATHER WORKSHOP 2012

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