Multi-Hazard Bayesian Hierarchical Model for Damage Prediction
Wednesday, Aug 6: 10:30 AM - 12:20 PM
Topic-Contributed Paper Session
A fundamental theoretical limitation undermines current disaster risk models: while real-world natural hazards manifest as complex, interconnected phenomena, existing approaches suffer from two critical constraints. First, conventional damage prediction models remain predominantly deterministic, relying on fixed parameters established through expert judgment rather than learned from data. Second, even recent probabilistic frameworks are fundamentally restricted by their underlying assumption of hazard independence, an assumption that directly contradicts the observed reality of cascading and compound disasters. By relying on fixed expert parameters rather than empirical data and treating hazards as independent phenomena, these models dangerously misrepresent the true risk landscape. This work addresses this critical challenge by developing the Multi-Hazard Bayesian Hierarchical Model (MH-BHM), which reconceptualizes the classical risk equation beyond its deterministic origins. The model's core theoretical contribution lies in reformulating a classical risk formula as a fully probabilistic model that naturally accommodates hazard interactions through its hierarchical structure while preserving the interpretability of the traditional hazard-exposure-vulnerability framework. Using tropical cyclone damage data (1952-2020) from the Philippines as a test case, with out-of-sample validation on recent events (2020-2022), the model demonstrates significant empirical advantages: a reduction in damage prediction error by 61\% compared to a single-hazard model, and 80\% compared to a benchmark deterministic model, corresponding to an improvement in damage estimation accuracy of USD 0.8 billion and USD 2 billion, respectively. This improved accuracy enables more effective disaster risk management across multiple domains, from optimized insurance pricing and national resource allocation to local adaptation strategies, fundamentally improving society's capacity to prepare for and respond to disasters.
keyword 1
You have unsaved changes.