Temporal aspects in crisis management and its implications on interface design for situation awareness
Preprint, 2011
Temporality should be considered in the design
of information technology support for crisis management
(CM), both because crises are dynamic events and because
time is a part of situation awareness (SA). This study has
used group interviews to explore how different temporal
aspects of CM can be considered in CM design and how
they can influence crisis managers SA. A prototype and a
scenario were used as mediating materials. The result
consists of two parts. The first part is comprised of the
participants’ reflections on how timelines can be used to
display information in CM information systems. According
to the participants, timelines should present: deadlines,
information sent to the public, incoming and outgoing
information, an overview of where the current activities
belong in the CM process and what has been going on since
the last shift during shift changes. Timelines should not
only display the listed information, but also provide functionality for adjusting the timescale so that information can be presented in alternative temporal perspectives. The second part of the result contains several obstacles that might influence the crisis managers’ ability to obtain SA. Obstacles elicited from the group discussions are: information overflow, fast changes of SA due to incoming information, difficulties to share SA with actors outside the CM centre, forgetting things that need attention and that SA depends on the quality of incoming information. The two parts of the result have been compiled into six design principles for how temporality can be considered in CM systems in order to support SA.
Situation awareness
Disaster management
Crisis management