Integrating household mitigation behaviour in flood risk analysis: An agent-based model approach

Research output: Contribution to JournalArticleAcademicpeer-review

Abstract

Recent studies showed that climate change and socioeconomic trends are expected to increase flood risks in many regions. However, in these studies, human behavior is commonly assumed to be constant, which neglects interaction and feedback loops between human and environmental systems. This neglect of human adaptation leads to a misrepresentation of flood risk. This article presents an agent-based model that incorporates human decision making in flood risk analysis. In particular, household investments in loss-reducing measures are examined under three economic decision models: (1) expected utility theory, which is the traditional economic model of rational agents; (2) prospect theory, which takes account of bounded rationality; and (3) a prospect theory model, which accounts for changing risk perceptions and social interactions through a process of Bayesian updating. We show that neglecting human behavior in flood risk assessment studies can result in a considerable misestimation of future flood risk, which is in our case study an overestimation of a factor two. Furthermore, we show how behavior models can support flood risk analysis under different behavioral assumptions, illustrating the need to include the dynamic adaptive human behavior of, for instance, households, insurers, and governments. The method presented here provides a solid basis for exploring human behavior and the resulting flood risk with respect to low-probability/high-impact risks.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)1977-1992
Number of pages16
JournalRisk Analysis
Volume37
Issue number10
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2017

Funding

The authors thank Michael Siegrist and two anonymous reviewers for their valuable comments and suggestions. Furthermore, the authors thank Scott Heckbert for his comments, which helped to improve the quality of this article. This research was funded by the European Commission through the ENHANCE project (grant agreement No. 308438), and by NWO VIDI (grant agreement No. 45214005), and VICI (grant agreement No. 016140067) grants.

FundersFunder number
NWO VIDI
VICI
European Commission308438
Nederlandse Organisatie voor Wetenschappelijk Onderzoek45214005, 016140067

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