麻豆淫院


In an emergency, word spreads fast and far

In an emergency, word spreads fast and far
James Bagrow, left, and Dashun Wang found that large-scale emergencies trigger a sharp spike in the number of phone calls and text messages sent by eyewitnesses in the vicinity. Credit: Mary Knox Merrill.

(麻豆淫院Org.com) -- Large-scale emergencies, such as bombings and plane crashes, trigger a sharp spike in the number of phone calls and text messages sent by eyewitnesses in the vicinity of the disaster, according to a research study by network scientists at Northeastern University.

The findings, reported in the online-only scientific journal PLoS ONE, could transform the ways in which real-time communications tools, such as smart phones, help policy makers and emergency personnel respond to potential tragedies. The web site ushahidi.com, for example, became a very popular tool for tracing the needs of victims of last year鈥檚 earthquake in Haiti.

鈥淥ur work may have important implications for policy-makers who want to rethink how emergency response tools are used,鈥 said coauthor James Bagrow, a postdoctoral research associate for Northeastern鈥檚 Center for Complex Network Research. "The sheer objectivity and volume of our data could help save lives.鈥

Albert-L谩szl贸 Barab谩si, director of the Center for Complex Network Research, and Dashun Wang, a PhD candidate at the center, also contributed to the report.

The researchers analyzed anonymous billing records of 10 million mobile phone subscribers in a western European country from 2007 to 2009. They compared call activity in the immediate aftermath of eight unplanned emergencies with eight scheduled activities, including rock concerts and sporting events.

Bombings and plane crashes鈥攖he most threatening 鈥攅licited the greatest spike in call activity, as well as the most rapid decline in call volume. Concerts and sporting events, on the other hand, induced a more gradual increase and steady decline in call volume.

鈥淧eople demonstrated an urge to use a cell phone as a response tool immediately only after extreme emergencies,鈥 said Wang, who noted that eyewitnesses tended to call members of their social network within minutes of the anomaly.

News of the most dangerous events often spread quickly and efficiently from an eyewitness to individuals as many as four links removed from his immediate social contacts, said Bagrow. Less threatening emergencies, such as minor earthquakes and blackouts, showed little propagation beyond the immediate social links of an eyewitness.

鈥淚nformation spreading is actually very rare,鈥 he said. 鈥淭his means that a population鈥檚 innate reticence to communicate may naturally suppress false information and may explain why the disaster myth鈥 鈥 the belief that panic is a common, widespread reaction to an emergency 鈥 鈥渃ontinues to hold, even with today鈥檚 constant communication.鈥

Citation: In an emergency, word spreads fast and far (2011, April 4) retrieved 11 May 2025 from /news/2011-04-emergency-word-fast.html
This document is subject to copyright. Apart from any fair dealing for the purpose of private study or research, no part may be reproduced without the written permission. The content is provided for information purposes only.

Explore further

Northeastern researchers made the call on 'zombie virus'

0 shares

Feedback to editors