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2013-08-07Zeitschriftenartikel DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0069829
Eyjafjallajökull and 9/11: The Impact of Large-Scale Disasters on Worldwide Mobility
dc.contributor.authorWoolley-Meza, Olivia
dc.contributor.authorGrady, Daniel
dc.contributor.authorThiemann, Christian
dc.contributor.authorBagrow, James P.
dc.contributor.authorBrockmann, Dirk
dc.date.accessioned2018-05-07T17:00:41Z
dc.date.available2018-05-07T17:00:41Z
dc.date.created2013-09-06
dc.date.issued2013-08-07none
dc.identifier.otherhttp://edoc.rki.de/oa/articles/reWMXWJqGH6DE/PDF/24eneLLvRG18Y.pdf
dc.identifier.urihttp://edoc.rki.de/176904/1661
dc.description.abstractLarge-scale disasters that interfere with globalized socio-technical infrastructure, such as mobility and transportation networks, trigger high socio-economic costs. Although the origin of such events is often geographically confined, their impact reverberates through entire networks in ways that are poorly understood, difficult to assess, and even more difficult to predict. We investigate how the eruption of volcano Eyjafjallajökull, the September 11th terrorist attacks, and geographical disruptions in general interfere with worldwide mobility. To do this we track changes in effective distance in the worldwide air transportation network from the perspective of individual airports. We find that universal features exist across these events: airport susceptibilities to regional disruptions follow similar, strongly heterogeneous distributions that lack a scale. On the other hand, airports are more uniformly susceptible to attacks that target the most important hubs in the network, exhibiting a well-defined scale. The statistical behavior of susceptibility can be characterized by a single scaling exponent. Using scaling arguments that capture the interplay between individual airport characteristics and the structural properties of routes we can recover the exponent for all types of disruption. We find that the same mechanisms responsible for efficient passenger flow may also keep the system in a vulnerable state. Our approach can be applied to understand the impact of large, correlated disruptions in financial systems, ecosystems and other systems with a complex interaction structure between heterogeneous components.eng
dc.language.isoger
dc.publisherRobert Koch-Institut
dc.subjectHumanseng
dc.subjectAlgorithmseng
dc.subjectTravel/statistics & numerical dataeng
dc.subjectEuropeeng
dc.subjectAfricaeng
dc.subjectAsiaeng
dc.subjectDisasterseng
dc.subjectGeographyeng
dc.subjectIcelandeng
dc.subjectModels Theoreticaleng
dc.subjectNorth Americaeng
dc.subjectSeptember 11 Terrorist Attackseng
dc.subjectTransportation/statistics & numerical dataeng
dc.subjectVolcanic Eruptionseng
dc.subject.ddc610 Medizin
dc.titleEyjafjallajökull and 9/11: The Impact of Large-Scale Disasters on Worldwide Mobility
dc.typeperiodicalPart
dc.identifier.urnurn:nbn:de:0257-10032746
dc.identifier.doi10.1371/journal.pone.0069829
dc.identifier.doihttp://dx.doi.org/10.25646/1586
local.edoc.container-titlePLoS ONE
local.edoc.container-textWoolley-Meza O, Grady D, Thiemann C, Bagrow JP, Brockmann D (2013) Eyjafjallajökull and 9/11: The Impact of Large-Scale Disasters on Worldwide Mobility. PLoS ONE 8(8): e69829.
local.edoc.fp-subtypeArtikel
local.edoc.type-nameZeitschriftenartikel
local.edoc.container-typeperiodical
local.edoc.container-type-nameZeitschrift
local.edoc.container-urlhttp://www.plosone.org/article/info%3Adoi%2F10.1371%2Fjournal.pone.0069829
local.edoc.container-publisher-namePublic Library of Science
local.edoc.container-volume8
local.edoc.container-issue8
local.edoc.container-year2013

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