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Epistemic uncertainties and natural hazard risk assessment - Part 2: What should constitute good practice?

机译:认知不确定性和自然危险风险评估 - 第2部分:什么应该构成良好的做法?

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摘要

Part 1 of this paper has discussed the uncertainties arising from gaps in knowledge or limited understanding of the processes involved in different natural hazard areas. Such deficits may include uncertainties about frequencies, process representations, parameters, present and future boundary conditions, consequences and impacts, and the meaning of observations in evaluating simulation models. These are the epistemic uncertainties that can be difficult to constrain, especially in terms of event or scenario probabilities, even as elicited probabilities rationalized on the basis of expert judgements. This paper reviews the issues raised by trying to quantify the effects of epistemic uncertainties. Such scientific uncertainties might have significant influence on decisions made, say, for risk management, so it is important to examine the sensitivity of such decisions to different feasible sets of assumptions, to communicate the meaning of associated uncertainty estimates, and to provide an audit trail for the analysis. A conceptual framework for good practice in dealing with epistemic uncertainties is outlined and the implications of applying the principles to natural hazard assessments are discussed. Six stages are recognized, with recommendations at each stage as follows: (1) framing the analysis, preferably with input from potential users; (2) evaluating the available data for epistemic uncertainties, especially when they might lead to inconsistencies; (3) eliciting information on sources of uncertainty from experts; (4) defining a workflow that will give reliable and accurate results; (5) assessing robustness to uncertainty, including the impact on any decisions that are dependent on the analysis; and (6) communicating the findings and meaning of the analysis to potential users, stakeholders, and decision makers. Visualizations are helpful in conveying the nature of the uncertainty outputs, while recognizing that the deeper epistemic uncertainties might not be readily amenable to visualizations.
机译:本文第1部分讨论了知识中的差距或有限地了解不同自然危险区域的过程的不确定性。这些缺陷可以包括关于频率,过程表示,参数,当前和未来边界条件,后果和影响的不确定性,以及评估模拟模型的观察的含义。这些是难以约束的认知不确定性,特别是在事件或场景概率方面,即使是基于专家判断的引发概率。本文审查了试图量化认知不确定性的影响提出的问题。这些科学的不确定因素可能对风险管理进行了重大影响,因此对风险管理进行了重大影响,因此对不同可行的假设审查此类决策的敏感性是重要的,以传达相关的不确定性估计的含义,并提供审计跟踪用于分析。概述了处理认知不确定性的良好做法的概念框架,并讨论了应用原则对自然灾害评估的影响。六个阶段被认可,每个阶段的建议如下:(1)框架分析,最好是潜在用户的输入; (2)评估认知不确定因素的可用数据,特别是当他们可能导致不一致时; (3)诱因关于专家的不确定性来源的信息; (4)定义工作流程,可提供可靠和准确的结果; (5)评估对不确定性的稳健性,包括对依赖于分析的任何决定的影响; (6)向潜在用户,利益相关者和决策者进行分析的调查结果和含义。可视化对传达不确定性产出的性质有所帮助,同时认识到更深层次的认知不确定性可能不会随意享受可视化。

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