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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Assessing the utility of social media as a data source for flood risk management using a real-time modelling framework

TLDR
In this paper, a real-time modelling framework is presented to identify areas likely to have flooded using data obtained only through social media, using graphics processing unit (GPU) accelerated hydrodynamic modelling.
Abstract
The utility of social media for both collecting and disseminating information during natural disasters is increasingly recognised. The rapid nature of urban flooding from intense rainfall means accurate surveying of peak depths and flood extents is rarely achievable, hindering the validation of urban flood models. This paper presents a real-time modelling framework to identify areas likely to have flooded using data obtained only through social media. Graphics processing unit (GPU) accelerated hydrodynamic modelling is used to simulate flooding in a 48-km2 area of Newcastle upon Tyne, with results automatically compared against flooding identified through social media, allowing inundation to be inferred elsewhere in the city with increased detail and accuracy. Data from Twitter during two 2012 flood events are used to test the framework, with the inundation results indicative of good agreement against crowd-sourced and anecdotal data, even though the sample of successfully geocoded Tweets was relatively small.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Using crowdsourced web content for informing water systems operations in snow-dominated catchments

TL;DR: A novel crowdsourcing procedure for extracting snow-related information from public web images, either produced by users or generated by touristic webcams, that is effective in extending the anticipation capacity of the lake operations, ultimately improving the system performance.
Journal ArticleDOI

Improving the classification of flood tweets with contextual hydrological information in a multimodal neural network

TL;DR: A multilingual multimodal neural network is designed that can effectively use both textual and hydrological information that can assist in the translation of the classification algorithm to unseen languages.
Journal ArticleDOI

Towards high resolution and cost-effective terrain mapping for urban hydrodynamic modelling in densely settled river-corridors

TL;DR: In this paper, aerial and ground-based point clouds of coarse and fine grain are used to generate high resolution point clouds for urban hydrodynamic modeling. But the work is limited to a 7 km stretch of the River Ciliwung in central Jakarta and the authors evaluated the scope of providing coverage for large segments of the city.
Journal ArticleDOI

On Data Quality Assurance and Conflation Entanglement in Crowdsourcing for Environmental Studies

TL;DR: Far from rejecting the usability ISO quality criterion, the paper advocates for a decoupling of the QA process and the DCDF step as much as possible while still integrating them within an approach analogous to a Bayesian paradigm.
References
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Book

On the partial difference equations of mathematical physics

TL;DR: In this paper, a discussion of the behavior of the solution as the mesh width tends to zero is presented, and the applicability of the method to more general difference equations and to those with arbitrarily many independent variables is made clear.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

Microblogging during two natural hazards events: what twitter may contribute to situational awareness

TL;DR: Analysis of microblog posts generated during two recent, concurrent emergency events in North America via Twitter, a popular microblogging service, aims to inform next steps for extracting useful, relevant information during emergencies using information extraction (IE) techniques.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

Chatter on the red: what hazards threat reveals about the social life of microblogged information

TL;DR: This paper considers a subset of the computer-mediated communication that took place during the flooding of the Red River Valley in the US and Canada in March and April 2009, focusing on the use of Twitter, a microblogging service, to identify mechanisms of information production, distribution, and organization.
Journal ArticleDOI

Mapping the global Twitter heartbeat: The geography of Twitter

TL;DR: Geographic proximity is found to play a minimal role both in who users communicate with and what they communicate about, providing evidence that social media is shifting the communicative landscape.
Journal ArticleDOI

Modeling floods in a dense urban area using 2D shallow water equations

TL;DR: In this article, a code solving the 2D shallow water equations by an explicit second-order scheme is used to simulate the severe October 1988 flood in the Richelieu urban locality of the French city of Nimes.
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