Statistical analysis of natural disasters and related losses [electronic resource] / V.F. Pisarenko, M.V. Rodkin.
2013
GB5005
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Details
Title
Statistical analysis of natural disasters and related losses [electronic resource] / V.F. Pisarenko, M.V. Rodkin.
Author
Pisarenko, V. F., author.
ISBN
9783319014548 electronic book
3319014544 electronic book
9783319014531
3319014544 electronic book
9783319014531
Published
Cham : Springer, [2013?]
Copyright
©2014
Language
English
Description
1 online resource (xi, 81 pages) : illustrations.
Item Number
10.1007/978-3-319-01454-8 doi
Call Number
GB5005
Dewey Decimal Classification
363.34
Summary
The study of disaster statistics and disaster occurrence is a complicated interdisciplinary field involving the interplay of new theoretical findings from several scientific fields like mathematics, physics, and computer science. Statistical studies on the mode of occurrence of natural disasters largely rely on fundamental findings in the statistics of rare events, which were derived in the 20th century. With regard to natural disasters, it is not so much the fact that the importance of this problem for mankind was recognized during the last third of the 20th century, - the myths one encounters in ancient civilizations show that the problem of disasters has always been recognized, - rather, it is the fact that mankind now possesses the necessary theoretical and practical tools to effectively study natural disasters, which in turn supports effective, major practical measures to minimize their impact. All the above factors have resulted in considerable progress in natural disaster research. Substantial accrued material on natural disasters and the use of advanced recording techniques have opened new doors for empirical analysis. However, despite the considerable progress made, the situation is still far from ideal. Sufficiently complete catalogs of events are still not available for many types of disasters, and the methodological and even terminological bases of research need to be further developed and standardized. The present monograph summarizes recent advances in the field of disaster statistics, primarily focusing on the occurrence of disasters that can be described by distributions with heavy tails. These disasters typically occur on a very broad range of scales, the rare greatest events being capable of causing losses comparable to the total losses of all smaller disasters of the same type.
Bibliography, etc. Note
Includes bibliographical references.
Access Note
Access limited to authorized users.
Source of Description
Description based on online resource; title from PDF title page (SpringerLink, viewed September 16, 2013).
Added Author
Rodkin, M. V. (Mikhail Vladimirovich), author.
Series
SpringerBriefs in earth sciences, 2191-5369
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Table of Contents
Heavy-tailed distributions and their properties
The stable approach to the risk assessment: estimation of quantiles of maximum event
The disaster statistics for various natural disasters
Discussion and conslusions.
The stable approach to the risk assessment: estimation of quantiles of maximum event
The disaster statistics for various natural disasters
Discussion and conslusions.