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Brayton Noll

Researcher at Delft University of Technology

Publications -  6
Citations -  58

Brayton Noll is an academic researcher from Delft University of Technology. The author has contributed to research in topics: Climate change & Computer science. The author has an hindex of 2, co-authored 4 publications receiving 7 citations. Previous affiliations of Brayton Noll include University of Twente.

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Contextualizing cross-national patterns in household climate change adaptation

TL;DR: In this article, the authors explore variations in factors shaping households' adaptations to flooding, the costliest hazard worldwide, and find that social influence, worry, climate change beliefs, self-efficacy and perceived costs exhibit universal effects on household adaptations, despite countries' differences.
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Tracing resilience, social dynamics and behavioral change: a review of agent-based flood risk models

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors focus on the costliest climate-exacerbated hazard, flooding, and review computational agent-based models that include behavioral change and societal dynamics, and highlight that applying a complex adaptive system perspective to trace the evolution of resilience can lead to a better understanding of transformational adaptation.
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How does private adaptation motivation to climate change vary across cultures? Evidence from a meta-analysis

TL;DR: In this paper, the effect of culture on adaptation motivation of individual households using meta-regression analysis was studied and they found a number of statistically significant relationships between culture and factors motivating private climate change adaptation.
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One and done? Exploring linkages between households' intended adaptations to climate‐induced floods

TL;DR: In this paper , the authors used protection motivation theory to account for the behavioral drivers of household adaptation to the most devastating climate-driven hazard: flooding, finding that past and additionally intended adaptations involving structural modification to one's home affect household behavior.
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Uncertainty in individual risk judgments associates with vulnerability and curtailed climate adaptation.

TL;DR: In this article , the authors explore socio-economic, psychological, and behavioral differences between individuals who can subjectively assess risks, and those who are risk-uncertain, and find that riskuncertain individuals are more likely to belong to societal subgroups classically considered as vulnerable, and have reduced capacities and intentions to adapt to hazards.