专家和公众对热带气旋风力超标预报图上不同配色方案和地图覆盖层的偏好和看法

Zoey Rosen, Marilee Long, Andrea B. Schumacher, Mark DeMaria, Alan Brammer
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引用次数: 0

摘要

地图图形通常用于灾害风险交流,通过数字、语言和视觉信息分层描述不确定的威胁。在飓风环境中,图形被用于传播预报期内不同威胁的概率。虽然过去曾对飓风图形进行过研究,但在设计时并未考虑色盲人士的易读性和本地化问题。本研究介绍了一项混合方法研究的结果,以专家(应急管理人员和气象学家)和公众为样本,测试了不同配色方案和地图叠加对风力超标地图图形的感知。来自佛罗里达州和路易斯安那州的 19 位专家接受了采访,了解他们对新的风力超标地图设计元素的偏好和风险认知。此外,还使用佛罗里达州和路易斯安那州的公众样本(n = 624)对图形原型进行了测试,以研究参与者的设计偏好和风险认知。专家和公众样本都更倾向于从黄色到红色的方案,不过专家认为从黄色到红色的方案显示的危害风险更大,而公众则认为只有红色的方案风险更大。专家和公众都更喜欢有叠加图案的地图;他们认为有叠加图案的地图比没有叠加图案的地图更危险。了解专家和公众对配色方案的偏好与风险认知之间的联系,对设计新图形时的风险交流具有重要意义。这项研究的结论为希望在飓风图表中应用通用设计方面的专家提供了未来研究的途径。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Expert and Public Preferences and Perceptions of Different Color Schemes and Map Overlays on a Tropical Cyclone Wind Exceedance Forecast Graphic
Map graphics are often used for hazard risk communication, layered with numerical, verbal, and visual information to describe an uncertain threat. In the hurricane context, graphics are used to communicate the probability of different threats over a forecasting period. While hurricane graphics have been studied in the past, they have not been designed with colorblind-friendly accessibility and localization in mind. This study presents the results of a mixed methods study, testing the perceptions of different color schemes and map overlays on a wind exceedance map graphic with samples of experts (emergency managers and meteorologists) and the public. Nineteen experts from Florida and Louisiana were interviewed about their preferences for and risk perceptions of the design elements of the new wind exceedance graphic. The graphic prototypes were also tested using a public sample (n = 624) from Florida and Louisiana to study participants’ design preferences and risk perceptions. Both expert and public samples preferred a yellow-to-red scheme, though experts thought the yellow-to-red scheme presented the hazard as riskier and the public thought the reds-only scheme was riskier. Experts and the public preferred a map graphic with overlays; they scored a map graphic with overlays as riskier than a version without overlays. Understanding the connection between color scheme preference and risk perception for both experts and the public has important implications on risk communication as new graphics are designed. The conclusion of this study provides avenues for future research for experts who want to apply universal design aspects into hurricane graphics.
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