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
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