TY - JOUR
T1 - Defining Extreme Events
T2 - A Cross-Disciplinary Review
AU - McPhillips, Lauren E.
AU - Chang, Heejun
AU - Chester, Mikhail
AU - Depietri, Yaella
AU - Friedman, Erin
AU - Grimm, Nancy
AU - Kominoski, John S.
AU - McPhearson, Timon
AU - Méndez-Lázaro, Pablo
AU - Rosi, Emma J.
AU - Shafiei Shiva, Javad
N1 - Funding Information:
Supporting Information from the review can be found with the online version of this article. Code developed for text analysis is available in an online repository (McPhillips & Herndon, 2017). We thank M. Herndon for assistance with development of the text analysis code. We also acknowledge useful early discussions and assistance from J. Santos-Hernandez, A. Lugo, R. Roy Chowdhury, A. Cooley, K. Grove, M. Hinrichs, and C. Redman. Financial support for this work was provided via the Urban Resilience to Extremes Sustainability Research Network under National Science Foundation grant AGS-1444755.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2018 The Authors.
PY - 2018/3
Y1 - 2018/3
N2 - Extreme events are of interest worldwide given their potential for substantial impacts on social, ecological, and technical systems. Many climate-related extreme events are increasing in frequency and/or magnitude due to anthropogenic climate change, and there is increased potential for impacts due to the location of urbanization and the expansion of urban centers and infrastructures. Many disciplines are engaged in research and management of these events. However, a lack of coherence exists in what constitutes and defines an extreme event across these fields, which impedes our ability to holistically understand and manage these events. Here, we review 10 years of academic literature and use text analysis to elucidate how six major disciplines—climatology, earth sciences, ecology, engineering, hydrology, and social sciences—define and communicate extreme events. Our results highlight critical disciplinary differences in the language used to communicate extreme events. Additionally, we found a wide range in definitions and thresholds, with more than half of examined papers not providing an explicit definition, and disagreement over whether impacts are included in the definition. We urge distinction between extreme events and their impacts, so that we can better assess when responses to extreme events have actually enhanced resilience. Additionally, we suggest that all researchers and managers of extreme events be more explicit in their definition of such events as well as be more cognizant of how they are communicating extreme events. We believe clearer and more consistent definitions and communication can support transdisciplinary understanding and management of extreme events.
AB - Extreme events are of interest worldwide given their potential for substantial impacts on social, ecological, and technical systems. Many climate-related extreme events are increasing in frequency and/or magnitude due to anthropogenic climate change, and there is increased potential for impacts due to the location of urbanization and the expansion of urban centers and infrastructures. Many disciplines are engaged in research and management of these events. However, a lack of coherence exists in what constitutes and defines an extreme event across these fields, which impedes our ability to holistically understand and manage these events. Here, we review 10 years of academic literature and use text analysis to elucidate how six major disciplines—climatology, earth sciences, ecology, engineering, hydrology, and social sciences—define and communicate extreme events. Our results highlight critical disciplinary differences in the language used to communicate extreme events. Additionally, we found a wide range in definitions and thresholds, with more than half of examined papers not providing an explicit definition, and disagreement over whether impacts are included in the definition. We urge distinction between extreme events and their impacts, so that we can better assess when responses to extreme events have actually enhanced resilience. Additionally, we suggest that all researchers and managers of extreme events be more explicit in their definition of such events as well as be more cognizant of how they are communicating extreme events. We believe clearer and more consistent definitions and communication can support transdisciplinary understanding and management of extreme events.
KW - Extreme event
KW - disaster
KW - disturbance
KW - interdisciplinary
KW - natural hazard
KW - text analysis
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U2 - 10.1002/2017EF000686
DO - 10.1002/2017EF000686
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85045517068
SN - 2328-4277
VL - 6
SP - 441
EP - 455
JO - Earth's Future
JF - Earth's Future
IS - 3
ER -