Tightly connected communities tend to be more resilient when facing extreme events such as earthquakes, hurricanes, floods or wildfires, says Jose Ramirez-Marquez, who develops metrics to analyze, quantify and ultimately improve performance of urban systems.
Emotions and levels of threat affect communities’ resilience during extreme events
Reader’s Picks
-
When Grandma and Grandpa are in charge, the children are likely staring at a screen—a long-standing parental complaint now supported [...]
-
Researchers at the University of Tsukuba have demonstrated that intensified environmental variability (EV) can promote the evolution of cooperation through [...]
-
Using Major League Baseball as a case study, Cornell research highlights potential shortcomings in diversity metrics that could obscure inequities [...]