TY - JOUR
T1 - Virtual Testbeds for Community Resilience Analysis
T2 - Step-by-Step Development Procedure and Future Orientation
AU - Enderami, S. Amin
AU - Sutley, Elaina J.
AU - Mazumder, Ram K.
AU - Dumler, Meredith
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2023 The Author(s)
PY - 2023/7/17
Y1 - 2023/7/17
N2 - Virtual community resilience testbeds enable community-level inferences, convergence research, and serve as decision-making aids. Testbeds are critical for the verification and validation of emerging computational models and quantitative assessment frameworks of community-level disaster impacts, disruption, and recovery processes. This paper illuminates the significance of establishing a standardized approach for developing virtual community resilience testbeds and proposes a systematic schema for this purpose. The workflow facilitates testbed development by defining a series of steps, starting with specifying the testbed simulation scope. Arguing hazard and community modules are the principal components of a testbed, we present a generic structure for testbeds and introduce minimum requirements for initiating each module. The workflow dissects the testbed's architecture and different attributes of the components beneath these modules. The proposed steps outline existing relevant tools and resources for creating the building, infrastructure, population, organization, and governance inventories. The paper discusses challenges testbed developers may encounter in procuring, cleaning, and merging required data and offers the initiatives and potential remedies, developed either by the authors or other researchers, to address these issues. The workflow concludes by describing how the testbed will be verified, visualized, published, and reused. The paper demonstrates the application of the proposed workflow by developing a testbed based on Onslow County, North Carolina using publicly available data. To foster sharing and reusing of developed testbeds by other researchers, all supporting documents, metadata, template algorithms, computer codes, and inventories of the Onslow Testbed are available at the DesignSafe-CI. The procedure proposed here can be used by other researchers to guide and standardize testbed development processes, and open access to virtual testbeds to the broader research community.
AB - Virtual community resilience testbeds enable community-level inferences, convergence research, and serve as decision-making aids. Testbeds are critical for the verification and validation of emerging computational models and quantitative assessment frameworks of community-level disaster impacts, disruption, and recovery processes. This paper illuminates the significance of establishing a standardized approach for developing virtual community resilience testbeds and proposes a systematic schema for this purpose. The workflow facilitates testbed development by defining a series of steps, starting with specifying the testbed simulation scope. Arguing hazard and community modules are the principal components of a testbed, we present a generic structure for testbeds and introduce minimum requirements for initiating each module. The workflow dissects the testbed's architecture and different attributes of the components beneath these modules. The proposed steps outline existing relevant tools and resources for creating the building, infrastructure, population, organization, and governance inventories. The paper discusses challenges testbed developers may encounter in procuring, cleaning, and merging required data and offers the initiatives and potential remedies, developed either by the authors or other researchers, to address these issues. The workflow concludes by describing how the testbed will be verified, visualized, published, and reused. The paper demonstrates the application of the proposed workflow by developing a testbed based on Onslow County, North Carolina using publicly available data. To foster sharing and reusing of developed testbeds by other researchers, all supporting documents, metadata, template algorithms, computer codes, and inventories of the Onslow Testbed are available at the DesignSafe-CI. The procedure proposed here can be used by other researchers to guide and standardize testbed development processes, and open access to virtual testbeds to the broader research community.
KW - Building inventory
KW - Community resilience
KW - Computer simulation
KW - Population inventory
KW - Virtual testbed
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/85165248847
UR - https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2772741623000376?via%3Dihub
U2 - 10.1016/j.rcns.2023.07.002
DO - 10.1016/j.rcns.2023.07.002
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85165248847
SN - 2772-7416
VL - 2
SP - 42
EP - 56
JO - Resilient Cities and Structures
JF - Resilient Cities and Structures
IS - 2
ER -