Decision making to mitigate the effects of natural hazards is a complex undertaking fraught with uncertainty. Models to describe risks associated with natural hazards have proliferated in recent years. Concurrently, t...Decision making to mitigate the effects of natural hazards is a complex undertaking fraught with uncertainty. Models to describe risks associated with natural hazards have proliferated in recent years. Concurrently, there is a growing body of work focused on developing best practices for natural hazard modeling and to create structured evaluation criteria for complex environmental models. However, to our knowledge there has been less focus on the conditions where decision makers can confidently rely on results from these models. In this review we propose a preliminary set of conditions necessary for the appropriate application of modeled results to natural hazard decision making and provide relevant examples within US wildfire management programs.展开更多
The technology investment strategy under uncertainty is the key subject. However, the expected utility maximization often employed as the decision process fails to consider the high risk with low probability cases. On...The technology investment strategy under uncertainty is the key subject. However, the expected utility maximization often employed as the decision process fails to consider the high risk with low probability cases. On the other hand, the existing min-max regret strategy tends to be dominated by the "worst assumption" regardless of its probability. This research proposes a new framework by formulating the regret by the Minkowski's generalized distance. The authors then apply the formulation to the IAM (integrated assessment model) MARIA. This study focuses on the uncertainties of CCS (carbon capture and storage) costs and the global warming damages. This formulation is then extended to the multi-stage decision frame, known as ATL (act-then-learn) method. The simulation results suggest that the substantial changes in CCS and nuclear deployment strategies depending on the future uncertainty scenarios. The results also suggest that the minimum regret strategy favors the capital accumulation in the early stage.展开更多
Contrary to the conventional wisdom which suggests that a perfectly rational subject with risk-averse attitude should never gamble, this paper provides a vivid example in our real economy for people to expect a positi...Contrary to the conventional wisdom which suggests that a perfectly rational subject with risk-averse attitude should never gamble, this paper provides a vivid example in our real economy for people to expect a positive return to gamble Within the existing literature, scholars have proposed different reasons to explain why an original risk-averse person would start to gamble, with the implicit assumption that the expected payoff of a bet is always lower than its cost. In contrast, our paper discusses when and why a risk-averse person could bet strategically with a positive expected return; in particular, we used field data in Hong Kong to illustrate a vivid scenario for positive expected return in gambling.展开更多
文摘Decision making to mitigate the effects of natural hazards is a complex undertaking fraught with uncertainty. Models to describe risks associated with natural hazards have proliferated in recent years. Concurrently, there is a growing body of work focused on developing best practices for natural hazard modeling and to create structured evaluation criteria for complex environmental models. However, to our knowledge there has been less focus on the conditions where decision makers can confidently rely on results from these models. In this review we propose a preliminary set of conditions necessary for the appropriate application of modeled results to natural hazard decision making and provide relevant examples within US wildfire management programs.
文摘The technology investment strategy under uncertainty is the key subject. However, the expected utility maximization often employed as the decision process fails to consider the high risk with low probability cases. On the other hand, the existing min-max regret strategy tends to be dominated by the "worst assumption" regardless of its probability. This research proposes a new framework by formulating the regret by the Minkowski's generalized distance. The authors then apply the formulation to the IAM (integrated assessment model) MARIA. This study focuses on the uncertainties of CCS (carbon capture and storage) costs and the global warming damages. This formulation is then extended to the multi-stage decision frame, known as ATL (act-then-learn) method. The simulation results suggest that the substantial changes in CCS and nuclear deployment strategies depending on the future uncertainty scenarios. The results also suggest that the minimum regret strategy favors the capital accumulation in the early stage.
文摘Contrary to the conventional wisdom which suggests that a perfectly rational subject with risk-averse attitude should never gamble, this paper provides a vivid example in our real economy for people to expect a positive return to gamble Within the existing literature, scholars have proposed different reasons to explain why an original risk-averse person would start to gamble, with the implicit assumption that the expected payoff of a bet is always lower than its cost. In contrast, our paper discusses when and why a risk-averse person could bet strategically with a positive expected return; in particular, we used field data in Hong Kong to illustrate a vivid scenario for positive expected return in gambling.