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Eve Gruntfest

Researcher at University of Colorado Colorado Springs

Publications -  38
Citations -  1707

Eve Gruntfest is an academic researcher from University of Colorado Colorado Springs. The author has contributed to research in topics: Flash flood & Flood myth. The author has an hindex of 21, co-authored 38 publications receiving 1562 citations. Previous affiliations of Eve Gruntfest include University of Oklahoma & University of Colorado Boulder.

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Flood Risk, Uncertainty, and Scientific Information for Decision Making: Lessons from an Interdisciplinary Project

TL;DR: In this article, a group of researchers initiated an interdisciplinary study of climate variability, scientific uncertainty, and hydrometeorological information for flood-risk decision making, focused on Colorado's Rocky Mountain Front Range urban corridor.
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False Alarms and Close Calls: A Conceptual Model of Warning Accuracy

TL;DR: It is argued that the metrics used to evaluate false alarms do not accurately represent the numbers of actual false alarms or the forecasters’ abilities because current metrics categorize events as either a hit or a miss and do not give forecasters credit for close calls.
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Risk factors for driving into flooded roads

TL;DR: This article found that people who do not take warnings seriously are more likely to drive through flooded roads, as are people aged 18-35, and those that do not know that motor vehicles are involved in more than half of all flood fatalities.
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Flash flood mitigation: recommendations for research and applications

TL;DR: In this paper, 35 researchers from nine countries met in Ravello, Italy at a NATO sponsored Advanced Study Institute, to discuss these issues and to develop a research agenda that incorporates the various components required to cope with flash floods.
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A Cognitive-Affective Scale for Hurricane Risk Perception

TL;DR: The measure has potential to inform approaches to hurricane preparedness efforts and advance planning for evacuation messages, and that the measure has good promise to generalize to other contexts in natural hazards as well as other domains of risk.