• DocumentCode
    3308777
  • Title

    Pearl Harbor, 9–11, Katrina, Virginia Tech shootings, Deepwater Horizon planning deficiencies: A sense-respond information-sharing solution

  • Author

    Desourdis, R.I.

  • Author_Institution
    Interoperability Solutions Practice, Sci. Applic. Int. Corp., Fairfax, VA, USA
  • fYear
    2012
  • fDate
    13-15 Nov. 2012
  • Firstpage
    220
  • Lastpage
    231
  • Abstract
    The deficiencies of leadership and planning documented in the 1946 Congressional investigation of the 1941 Pearl Harbor attack are also evident in evidence presented at the investigations of 9/11, Katrina, the Virginia Tech shootings, Deepwater Horizon, the Columbine shootings, and Exxon Valdez. Even day-to-day incidents in a major Urban Area Security Initiative (UASI) region with massive technology investment suffers from these deficiencies. Mitigating and eliminating these deficiencies requires detailed information-sharing planning to replace the legacy ad hoc publish-and-subscribe methods pervasive today in public safety and emergency management, which - for many reasons - sustains the causes and effects of these planning deficiencies. This paper presents a conceptual sense-respond information-sharing architecture driven by a nonmonotonic-reasoning-based intelligent kernel. The process of implementing this proactive decision-support capability for day-to-day as well as major incidents/events as well as the use of the tool itself will together mitigate and eventually eliminate the Pearl Harbor deficiencies.
  • Keywords
    disasters; emergency management; middleware; nonmonotonic reasoning; 9-11; Columbine shootings; Deepwater Horizon planning; Exxon Valdez; Katrina; Pearl Harbor attack; UASI region; Urban Area Security Initiative; Virginia Tech shootings; emergency management; information-sharing solution; intelligent kernel; leadership; nonmonotonic-reasoning; public safety; publish-and-subscribe method; Collaboration; Information management; Interoperability; Organizations; Planning; Safety; Training; Interoperability Continuum; artificial intelligence; disaster emergency communications; emergency management; evacuation planning; holistic interoperability; information sharing; interoperability; nonmonotonic reasoning; public safety; public safety communications; publish and subscribe; sense and respond; sense-respond; success planning factors;
  • fLanguage
    English
  • Publisher
    ieee
  • Conference_Titel
    Homeland Security (HST), 2012 IEEE Conference on Technologies for
  • Conference_Location
    Waltham, MA
  • Print_ISBN
    978-1-4673-2708-4
  • Type

    conf

  • DOI
    10.1109/THS.2012.6459853
  • Filename
    6459853