Designing inclusion and continuity for resilient communication during disasters

Journal Article (2022)
Author(s)

Indushree Banerjee (TU Delft - System Engineering, TU Delft - Water Resources)

Martijn Warnier (TU Delft - Multi Actor Systems)

Frances M.T. Brazier (TU Delft - System Engineering)

Research Group
Water Resources
DOI related publication
https://doi.org/10.1080/23789689.2022.2124717
More Info
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Publication Year
2022
Language
English
Related content
Research Group
Water Resources
Journal title
Sustainable and Resilient Infrastructure
Issue number
6
Volume number
7
Pages (from-to)
955-970
Downloads counter
155
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Institutional Repository
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Abstract

This paper addresses the challenge of establishing a resilient disaster communication system that transitions seamlessly from a phone-based ad hoc network to any portable infrastructure and back. For this purpose, this paper presents a value-based design of an autonomous and self-organized protocol (SOS-hybrid). This design ensures seamless integration between various communication networks taking local context into account to increase inclusion and continuity of connectivity. SOS-hybrid has two benefits. First, local self-organization can adapt to the local situation in a disaster area. Second, context-awareness can fill in the spatial gaps of coverage associated with top-down approaches. An agent-based modelling approach was used to develop the simulation of the proposed communication network to evaluate the impact of introducing SOS-hybrid in the aftermath of a disaster. SOS-hybrid allows phones to simultaneously provide the benefits of (i) ad hoc mobile networking, allowing hard-to-reach people to connect, and (ii) infrastructure-based communication, allowing phones to more efficiently send messages over long distances. Benefits include two-way communication between community and rescue operators, inclusion and continued connectivity for immobile citizens stuck in isolated out of coverage areas, and seamless transition without loss of messages.