Psychology - Listen to three different recording and answer the questions under each recording separately - Humanities
1. Listen to Invisobilia (NPR) Podcast from June 1, 2017 titled Emotions: Part 1: (55 min)https://www.npr.org/2017/06/01/530928414/emotions-...What struck you about the contents of this podcast?Some of the ideas about emotions and the way trauma impacts the brain might be controversial. How did you react to these ideas?How would you challenge those ideas or how might you be intrigued to explore more?2. Listen: to This American Life Episode 296: After The Flood (September 9, 2005), (60 min)https://www.thisamericanlife.org/296/after-the-flo...What act stuck out to you the most? Why?What would you find the most challenging as someone involved in Emergency Management or as part of a Recovery team?How might these experiences have been better prevented?What can we do to build more resilient communities BEFORE a disaster strikes so the impact of such a disaster is lessened? What must be done AFTER a disaster in this context to build community recovery and resilience?3. Listen to “The Daily” podcast episode from May 24,2018 (Links to an external site.) (23 min) https://www.nytimes.com/2018/05/24/podcasts/the-da...Next, read these two articles, which can be found in the attachment.Psychological Outcomes in Reaction to Media Exposure to Disasters and Large-Scale Violence: A Meta-AnalysisSocial Media in Disaster Risk Reduction and Crisis ManagementSocial Media and the Internet undoubtedly give us helpful tools for crisis response and management. That said, there are negatives that can sometimes outweigh the positives. 1. Discuss the ways that the changing media landscape is affecting the psychosocial consequences of disaster, for better or for worse.2. Reflect on the ways that media (social or otherwise) positively and negatively impact crisis management. How can we quell the rumor mill? How do we combat further traumatization?Instructions:These posts does not have to be any particular length or style, but it does need to respond to all of the prompts.You need to give response for each separately so I can know which to what listening.
socialmedia_disasterriskreduction_1_.pdf
psych_mediaexposure_2017_1_.pdf
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Sci Eng Ethics (2014) 20:717–733
DOI 10.1007/s11948-013-9502-z
ORIGINAL PAPER
Social Media in Disaster Risk Reduction and Crisis
Management
David E. Alexander
Received: 24 April 2013 / Accepted: 27 November 2013 / Published online: 4 December 2013
Springer Science+Business Media Dordrecht 2013
Abstract This paper reviews the actual and potential use of social media in
emergency, disaster and crisis situations. This is a field that has generated intense
interest. It is characterised by a burgeoning but small and very recent literature. In
the emergencies field, social media (blogs, messaging, sites such as Facebook, wikis
and so on) are used in seven different ways: listening to public debate, monitoring
situations, extending emergency response and management, crowd-sourcing and
collaborative development, creating social cohesion, furthering causes (including
charitable donation) and enhancing research. Appreciation of the positive side of
social media is balanced by their potential for negative developments, such as
disseminating rumours, undermining authority and promoting terrorist acts. This
leads to an examination of the ethics of social media usage in crisis situations.
Despite some clearly identifiable risks, for example regarding the violation of privacy, it appears that public consensus on ethics will tend to override unscrupulous
attempts to subvert the media. Moreover, social media are a robust means of
exposing corruption and malpractice. In synthesis, the widespread adoption and use
of social media by members of the public throughout the world heralds a new age in
which it is imperative that emergency managers adapt their working practices to the
challenge and potential of this development. At the same time, they must heed the
ethical warnings and ensure that social media are not abused or misused when crises
and emergencies occur.
Keywords Social media Disasters Emergency management Ethics
Twitter Facebook
D. E. Alexander (&)
Institute for Risk and Disaster Reduction, University College London, Gower Street,
London WC1E 6BT, UK
e-mail: david.alexander@ucl.ac.uk
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D. E. Alexander
Introduction and Definitions
At 09:02, local time, on 29th May 2012, a damaging earthquake struck EmiliaRomagna and Lombardy regions of northern Italy. This was the second major
seismic event to affect the area in 10 days. It killed 17 people and caused extensive
damage to 40 municipalities. Within 50 minutes a clear and relatively comprehensive picture of the earthquake and some of its most important impacts was available.
It could be consulted via the Internet from almost anywhere in the world. The
information presented was essentially accurate and the speed with which it became
available was largely a result of the use of social media to communicate from the
sites affected to places where data could be collected and presented to the public.
The term ‘social media’ embraces blogs, micro-blogs, social book-marking,
social networking, forums, collaborative creation of documents (via wikis1) and the
sharing of audio, photographic and video files (Balana 2012). It is characterised by
interactive communication, in which message content is exchanged between
individuals, audiences, organisations and sectors of the general public.
Social media usage is, to some extent, negatively correlated with age and
positively with educational attainment. For example, people over the age of 55 tend
to prefer conventional sources of news. The degree of adoption of social media
varies from country to country but is generally dynamic in most environments and
hence any summary statistics are liable to become outdated rapidly. Attempts to
relate social media to personality factors have suggested that they are most
attractive to people, of both sexes, who are relatively extrovert (Correa et al. 2010),
but there is no indication of the extent to which any effort to develop profiles of
users might be culturally conditioned. Information on gender differentiation is, at
best, fragmentary (Armstrong and McAdams 2009).
In the United States, the Internet is the most important source of information
for people under the age of 30. For other Americans, it is second only to
television (Krimsky 2007). Elsewhere, the use of ‘smart’ phones and social media
resources is increasing so rapidly that they are now a force to be reckoned with
throughout the world. Social media dispense with ‘‘information gatekeepers’’,
which include doctors giving on-line medical advice and journalists relating a
news story. These figures are replaced by apomediaries, in which network filtering
or group moderation are the only processes by which the spontaneous feed of
information is regulated—a matter of apomediation or disintermediation (Eysenbach 2008).
This paper offers a review of the use of social media in disasters and major
incidents. I consider both how citizens, emergency managers and first responders
make use of social media in crisis and how researchers perceive and characterise the
phenomenon. I examine seven ways in which social media are put to use for disaster
response, recovery and risk reduction. As social media have both beneficial and
potentially malign connotations, their advantages and drawbacks are discussed.
Next, I consider the ethical implications of social media in disaster, including the
1
The term ‘wiki’ is defined by the OED as ‘‘A type of web page designed so that its content can be edited
by anyone who accesses it, using a simplified markup language.’’ It was apparently first used in 1995.
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Social Media in Disaster Risk Reduction
719
risks and dilemmas of unregulated communication and the degree of inclusiveness
of new media. In order to end on a positive note, examples of successes with social
media in disaster are briefly discussed. Finally, some conclusions are drawn, but
these must necessarily be provisional, as the field is in the early stages of rapid
evolution in relation to both technological development and social acceptance.
The Research Literature
The research literature on social networking and social media in disasters and crises
is still quite limited. Moreover, it focuses on the short-term aspects of emergency
response and rapid recovery. It is understandable that there are as yet no studies of
the longer term, both because social media are a relatively new phenomenon and
because the research is also new. Although ‘new media’, such as the Internet, have
received attention from academics for a decade or more, very little of the research
on social networking predates 2007. However, there is a trend towards a rapid
increase in the number of papers that have been published. In this context, the
literature on ‘social media’ needs to be differentiated from that on the social aspects
of mass media, which is a much wider field that embraces more conventional and
long-standing forms of dissemination of information, such as radio and television
(Quarantelli 1989).
Studies of social media in disasters have been conducted as part of a general
tendency to examine the functioning of social interaction by means of the Internet
and mobile devices (Krimsky 2007). Both sets of literature concentrate mainly on
specific themes, which are:
•
•
•
•
how social networks function and how they are used
how to build and utilise algorithms either to enhance social networking or to
monitor it
the extent to which people use social networks, how they perceive them and
what their communication preferences are
the penetration of devices such as ‘smart’ mobile telephones and the extent to
which these provide people with access to social media.
In addition, students of risk, crisis and disaster have studied:
•
•
•
how social media are used in crises
the views and opinions of emergency managers and journalists regarding social
media and the extent to which the new media are integrated with more
traditional means of communication
how social media interact with the traditional sources of information.
There is a broad distinction between studies of the technical and social aspects of
new media. The creation of new platforms and algorithms characterises the former
(Cheong and Lee 2010; White and Plotnik 2010), while studies of the kinds of usage
and messages sent relate to the latter (Hughes and Palen 2009; Lindsay 2011). The
technical side includes by studies of the rate and modality of diffusion of messages
(Song and Yan 2012).
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D. E. Alexander
While researchers work to develop software for the efficient dissemination of
messages via social networks during crisis situations (e.g. Plotnick et al. 2009),
Reuter et al. (2012) advocated a more systematic approach to the use of social
networking software in crisis situations, starting with classification of uses and
potentials.
Researchers are equivocal about the balance between the advantages and
drawbacks of social media (see below), but they are united in identifying the uses to
which the media can be put. Social media promote cross-platform accessibility and a
constant flow of information. Situational updates can be complemented by
geographical and locational data (Vieweg et al. 2010). Just-in-time information
can be provided on how to cope with developing situations. Moreover, social media
provide a framework for the work of journalists and for public discussion and debate.
Social Media in Disaster and Crisis
The following are some of the ways in which social media can be used in disaster
risk reduction and crisis response.
1.
A listening function. Social media are able to give a voice to people who do not
normally have one. They also enable a remarkably democratic form of
participation in public debate and facilitate the exchange of information and
points of view. During an emergency, through their tendency to coalesce
opinions (or stimulate monetary donations), social media are capable of
revealing some aspects of the mental and emotional state of a nation. This may
seem a rather exaggerated claim, but it should be noted that Quarantelli (1997)
argued that the advent of modern information and communications technology
involves changes that are as profound as those that occurred after the invention
of printing. These changes do, or soon will, affect directly the majority of the
population and the rest indirectly.
The listening function involves constantly or periodically sampling the varied
output of social media. This enables currents of popular opinion and public
preference to be gauged. It may also indicate how the public is behaving and
reacting to events. Crawford (2009) classified online listening into three categories:
background listening, reciprocal listening and delegated listening by corporations.
Crawford defined background listening as mere tuning in, a minimal form of
engagement. Reciprocal listening involves two-way exchange of messages, with
mutual sensitivity to their content and implications; and delegated listening is a
form of ‘‘arm’s length engagement’’, in which messages are monitored and
responded to, if at all, en masse. Hence, listening is a question of keeping track of
opinions, giving advice or collecting information that is of interest to corporations.
As Crawford (2009, p. 526) noted, ‘‘there has been a glorification of ‘voice’ as the
prime form of participation online.’’
2.
Monitoring a situation. Whereas the listening function involves the passive
collection of information, monitoring is conducted in order to improve reactions
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Social Media in Disaster Risk Reduction
721
to events and better to manage the general public by learning what people are
thinking and doing. Current research (Bird et al. 2012) suggests that harmful
and inaccurate rumours are not particularly enhanced by the use of social
media. One reason for this is that, with mass participation, the false rumours
that do begin to circulate are easily corrected by knowledgeable people. Hence,
in the aftermath of the Japanese earthquake and tsunami of March 2011, there
was little indication that the massive use of social media by the Japanese public
led to the successful propagation of rumour and wildly incorrect information
(Hjorth and Kim 2011). Moreover, Stirratt (2011) found that, in the Japan
disaster, 49 \% of Twitter messages were either positive or somewhat positive in
their attitude to emergency preparedness and only 7 \% were negative.
Floods in Queensland, Australia, led to extensive use of social media for public
interaction and communication, but not for the mass propagation of false
information. Bird et al. (2012, pp. 30–31) noted that: ‘‘While rumours were
common at the height of the disaster, respondents reported that the moderators of
the Facebook pages were prompt at confirming information and providing official
sources when available.’’ Hence, despite the presence of a major crisis—the
floods—the use of social media did not lead to a situation of general anarchy that
was out of control.
3.
Integration of social media into emergency planning and crisis management. In
a questionnaire survey (Barr 2011), it was found that 80 \% of US general public
and 69 \% of online users felt that it would be beneficial for national emergency
response organisers to monitor social networking sites regularly. However, in
most places this has not happened. Agencies are afraid that social networks will
produce inaccurate information of dubious provenance (Goolsby 2010).
Moreover, the full integration of social networks into disaster management
would require many of them to change their working practices, as, in the words
of Palen et al. (2007), ‘‘command-and-control models do not easily adapt to the
expanding data-generating and data-seeking activities by the public.’’ Nonetheless, there is immense potential to make data dissemination a two-way
process, in which information is both received from the public and fed to it
(Crowe 2012; Jennex 2012a; Sykes and Travis 2012).
The assertion that command and control may be at odds with social media
deserves further elaboration. I have argued elsewhere (Alexander 2008) that there is
a continuum between command-based and collaborative models of emergency
management. The command end of the spectrum tends to be authoritarian, and to
divide competencies by level of command into strategic, tactical and operational.
The collaborative end of the spectrum tends to divide competencies by theme, such
as communication, logistics, and shelter. As there is no clear hierarchical structure
in social media, they fit much better into a collaborative model than a command one.
Present experience suggests (Yates and Paquette 2011) that issuing orders to the
general public is likely to generate an adverse reaction on social media, whereas
issuing requests for collaboration may elicit a more positive response, based on
involvement rather than alienation. Moreover, the thematic organisation of
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D. E. Alexander
collaborative models of emergency management favour collective information
sharing on tasks, topics and sectors.
Hughes and Palen (2012) observed that the strict bureaucratic nature of
emergency management systems, such as the US NIMS, is at variance with the open
system and free access character of the social media of which emergency managers
are being exhorted to make use. However, the direct, person to person nature of
social media is a boon to public information officers, as it helps them avoid the
common pitfall of being misquoted by the official media. Moreover, citizens are
widely recognised to be the real first responders after disaster (Helsloot and
Ruitenberg 2004): they hold the key to the use of social media as an extension of
emergency management. Rarely are emergency management organisations ready to
utilise such developments. As Westbrook et al. (2012, p. 2) observed, ‘‘The
community, volunteer organizations, and news organizations are currently embracing social media, but EM is slow to adopt and implement it on a full scale.’’ There
are demonstrable benefits from doing so. For example, Vihalemm et al. (2012)
found that social media can help citizens receive, understand and cope emotionally
with warning messages.
Yet there is an imperative to act: the public can now share information and
disseminate critical news to the world and each other without going through
government communication methods. This is revolutionizing the way in which
people seek help and the way first responders and managers receive and exchange
information. The very structure of communication and information sharing
dynamics is changing for both for emergency managers and the public. As the
Director of the US. Federal Emergency Management Agency, Craig Fugate, stated
in a Senate Homeland Security Hearing in 2011, one of the social elements that is
changing in the field of emergency management is the way the public can now be
viewed ‘‘as a resource and not a liability.’’ For example, social media can be used to
deliver warnings to users. In the most sophisticated cases, these may involve local
information in the form of maps and data, as well as instructions on what to do
during an impending crisis.
4.
Crowd-sourcing and collaborative development. In most disasters, the first
responders are the public. Moreover, social capital is involved in the form of
the mobilisation of skills, leadership, networks, support systems, and so on
(Dufty 2012). This involves the concept that social networks and interaction
between people increase productivity and lend added value to outcomes. The
social networks benefit from the particular skills of their members. One aspect
of the formation of social capital through social media is crowd-sourcing. For
example, Ushahidi is the name of a crowd-sourced crisis mapping platform
(www.ushahidi.com—Gao et al. 2011a). Sahana, and its derivatives Eden,
Vesuvius and Mayon, are open source disaster management systems. These
initiatives rely on spontaneous contributions to make them work. This endows
them with positive feedback, in that the more they are used, the more popular
they become and the more they encourage users to contribute to them. Ushahidi
and Sahana are examples of the use of social media to create and disseminate
methods and good practices, and to form social capital. They are open-source,
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Social Media in Disaster Risk Reduction
723
free-access platforms that can be used and modified by anyone. In this respect,
they are particularly useful for places where disaster management and response
are poorly developed and resources are scarce.
In crowd-sourcing, it is suggested that 1 \% of the crowd will create content, 10 \%
will validate it and 89 \% will use it (Goolsby 2010). However, this is sufficient to
maintain a constant flux of information and a high level of consultation of the sites
built upon crowd-sourcing. The drawbacks are that crowd-sourcing lacks a common
mechanism to facilitate coordination between organisations, it lacks security
features, and it does not necessarily provide the information that is most needed or
most accurate (Hammon and Hippner 2012). Nevertheless, crisis mapping is
particularly suited to crowd-sourcing through the use of social networks, in that
reports can be received from many users, and compiled into the resultant maps,
which can be widely disseminated. Maps can depict survivors’ temporary settlement
camps, resource distribution sources, accessible roads, impacted areas, and so on. In
the words of one researcher (Goolsby 2009), crowd-sourcing creates a sort of ‘‘open
intranet’’ in relation to the Internet, or in other words a community of users.
5.
Creating social cohesion and promoting therapeutic initiatives. Social media
can be used to make people feel part of particular initiatives. They can foster a
sense of identification with local or on-line com ...
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