Difference between revisions of "IS428 AY2019-20T1 Assign Lim Pei Xuan"

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== Overview ==
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[[File:LPXASGTitle.jpg|900px|center]]
<p>St. Himark is a vibrant community located in the Oceanus Sea. Home to the world-renowned St. Himark Museum, beautiful beaches, and the Wilson Forest Nature Preserve, St. Himark is one of the region’s best cities for raising a family and provides employment across a number of industries including the Always Safe Nuclear Power Plant. Well, all that was true before the disastrous earthquake that hits the area during the course of this year’s challenge. Mayor Jordan, city officials, and emergency services are overwhelmed and are desperate for assistance in understanding the true situation on the ground and how best to deploy the limited resources available to this relatively small community.
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[[IS428_AY2019-20T1_Assign_Lim_Pei_Xuan|<font color="#fffff" size=2><b>OVERVIEW</b></font>]]
  
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[[IS428_AY2019-20T1_Assign_Lim_Pei_Xuan: Data|<font color="#000000" size=2><b>DATA</b></font>]]
  
== Mini-Challenge 1 : Crowdsourcing for Situational Awareness ==  
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<p>St. Himark has been hit by an earthquake, leaving officials scrambling to determine the extent of the damage and dispatch limited resources to the areas in most need. They quickly receive seismic readings and use those for an initial deployment but realize they need more information to make sure they have a realistic understanding of the true conditions throughout the city.
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[[IS428_AY2019-20T1_Assign_Lim_Pei_Xuan: Visualization|<font color="#000000" size=2><b>VISUALIZATION</b></font>]]
  
<p>In a prescient move of community engagement, the city had released a new damage reporting mobile application shortly before the earthquake. This app allows citizens to provide more timely information to the city to help them understand damage and prioritize their response. In this mini-challenge, use app responses in conjunction with shake maps of the earthquake strength to identify areas of concern and advise emergency planners. Note: the shake maps are from April 6 and April 8 respectively.
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[[IS428_AY2019-20T1_Assign_Lim_Pei_Xuan: Task Answers|<font color="#000000" size=2><b>TASK ANSWERS</b></font>]]
  
<p>With emergency services stretched thin, officials are relying on citizens to provide them with much needed information about the effects of the quake to help focus recovery efforts.
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<p>By combining seismic readings of the quake, responses from the app, and background knowledge of the city, help the city triage their efforts for rescue and recovery.
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[[IS428_AY2019-20T1_Assign_Lim_Pei_Xuan: Miscellaneous|<font color="#000000" size=2><b>MISCELLANEOUS</b></font>]]
 
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=== The Questions ===  
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#Emergency responders will base their initial response on the earthquake shake map. Use visual analytics to determine how their response should change based on damage reports from citizens on the ground. How would you prioritize neighborhoods for response? Which parts of the city are hardest hit?
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#Use visual analytics to show uncertainty in the data. Compare the reliability of neighborhood reports. Which neighborhoods are providing reliable reports? Provide a rationale for your response.
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[[File:LPXASGMAP.jpg|500px|center]]
#How do conditions change over time? How does uncertainty in change over time? Describe the key changes you see.  
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== Overview ==
 
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<p>St. Himark is a vibrant community located in the Oceanus Sea. Home to the world-renowned St. Himark Museum, beautiful beaches, and the Wilson Forest Nature Preserve, St. Himark is one of the region’s best cities for raising a family and provides employment across a number of industries including the Always Safe Nuclear Power Plant. Well, all that was true before the disastrous earthquake that hits the area during the course of this year’s challenge. Mayor Jordan, city officials, and emergency services are overwhelmed and are desperate for assistance in understanding the true situation on the ground and how best to deploy the limited resources available to this relatively small community.
=== The Data ===
 
  
<p>The data for MC1 includes one (CSV) file spanning the entire length of the event, containing (categorical) individual reports of shaking/damage by neighborhood over time.  Reports are made by citizens at any time, however, they are only recorded in 5-minute batches/increments due to the server configuration.  Furthermore, delays in the receipt of reports may occur during power outages.
 
  
<p>'''mc1-reports-data.csv fields''':
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== Mini-Challenge 2 : Citizen Science to the Rescue ==
  
* '''time:''' timestamp of incoming report/record, in the format YYYY-MM-DD hh:mm:ss
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<p>One of St. Himark’s largest employers is the Always Safe nuclear power plant. The pride of the city, it produces power for St. Himark’s needs and exports the excess to the mainland providing a steady revenue stream. However, the plant was not compliant with international standards when it was constructed and is now aging. As part of its outreach to the broader community, Always Safe agreed to provide funding for a set of carefully calibrated professional radiation monitors at fixed locations throughout the city. Additionally, a group of citizen scientists led by the members of the Himark Science Society started an education initiative to build and deploy lower cost homemade sensors, which people can attach to their cars. The sensors upload data to the web by connecting through the user’s cell phone. The goal of the project was to engage the community and demonstrate that the nuclear plant’s operations were not significantly changing the region’s natural background levels of radiation.
* '''location:''' id of neighborhood where person reporting is feeling the shaking and/or seeing the damage
 
* '''{shake_intensity, sewer_and_water, power, roads_and_bridges, medical, buildings}:''' reported categorical value of how violent the shaking was/how bad the damage was (0 - lowest, 10 - highest; missing data allowed)
 
  
<p>Also included are two shakemap (PNG) files which indicate where the corresponding earthquakes' epicenters originate as well as how much shaking can be felt across the city.
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<p>When an earthquake strikes St. Himark, the nuclear power plant suffers damage resulting in a leak of radioactive contamination. Further, a coolant leak sprayed employees’ cars and contaminated them at varying levels. Now, the city’s government and emergency management officials are trying to understand if there is a risk to the public while also responding to other emerging crises related to the earthquake as well as satisfying the public’s concern over radiation.

Latest revision as of 18:35, 12 October 2019

LPXASGTitle.jpg

OVERVIEW

DATA

VISUALIZATION

TASK ANSWERS

MISCELLANEOUS


LPXASGMAP.jpg

Overview

St. Himark is a vibrant community located in the Oceanus Sea. Home to the world-renowned St. Himark Museum, beautiful beaches, and the Wilson Forest Nature Preserve, St. Himark is one of the region’s best cities for raising a family and provides employment across a number of industries including the Always Safe Nuclear Power Plant. Well, all that was true before the disastrous earthquake that hits the area during the course of this year’s challenge. Mayor Jordan, city officials, and emergency services are overwhelmed and are desperate for assistance in understanding the true situation on the ground and how best to deploy the limited resources available to this relatively small community.

Mini-Challenge 2 : Citizen Science to the Rescue

One of St. Himark’s largest employers is the Always Safe nuclear power plant. The pride of the city, it produces power for St. Himark’s needs and exports the excess to the mainland providing a steady revenue stream. However, the plant was not compliant with international standards when it was constructed and is now aging. As part of its outreach to the broader community, Always Safe agreed to provide funding for a set of carefully calibrated professional radiation monitors at fixed locations throughout the city. Additionally, a group of citizen scientists led by the members of the Himark Science Society started an education initiative to build and deploy lower cost homemade sensors, which people can attach to their cars. The sensors upload data to the web by connecting through the user’s cell phone. The goal of the project was to engage the community and demonstrate that the nuclear plant’s operations were not significantly changing the region’s natural background levels of radiation.

When an earthquake strikes St. Himark, the nuclear power plant suffers damage resulting in a leak of radioactive contamination. Further, a coolant leak sprayed employees’ cars and contaminated them at varying levels. Now, the city’s government and emergency management officials are trying to understand if there is a risk to the public while also responding to other emerging crises related to the earthquake as well as satisfying the public’s concern over radiation.