第110回総合防災セミナー(2/18)

  • セミナー
開催期間 2026.02.18  10:00 ~ 11:30
場所 宇治キャンパス本館S-519D および オンライン
対象 研究者、学生、一般

記の通り、2月18日(水)第110回総合防災セミナーを開催いたします。
皆様のご参加をお待ちしています。
本セミナーは、英語で行います。
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[Date & Time]
2月18日(水)10:00-11:30

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[Venue]
宇治キャンパス本館S519D および オンライン
参加登録はこちら(オンライン参加の場合、2月17日午前9時までにご登録ください):https://forms.gle/8TVGc6AYsrHjQyzo6
対面参加の場合は、直接会場にお越しいただいて構いません。
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[Title]
Learning across hazards: from wildfires to earthquakes
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[Speakers]
Sandra Vaiciulyte
Assistant Professor, DPRI, Kyoto University
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[Abstract]
Warning systems are designed to save lives, yet little is known about how people experience repeated alerts during unfolding crises. This seminar explores how individuals interpreted, emotionally processed, and responded to successive warnings, drawing on empirical findings from 2025 January California wildfires, and drawing parallels to earthquake aftershock alerting. The talk addresses three core questions: how people respond to different alert types, whether alert fatigue develops as alerts accumulate, and how stress levels and coping strategies evolve over time. Results show that while a small minority consistently ignore alerts, most people actively engage with warning information. Crucially, alerting itself emerges as a stressor that individuals must manage in order to respond effectively. Analysis of coping strategies reveals that most participants adopt adaptive responses, such as acceptance, planning, and cognitive reframing, particularly during early alerts. By comparing patterns across alert types, this seminar highlights opportunities for cross-hazard learning, offering insights into how alert design and communication strategies can better support effective response under prolonged uncertainty.
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[Short bio]
Sandra Vaiciulyte is an Assistant Professor at Kyoto University’s Disaster Prevention Research Institute (DPRI), affiliated with the Research Center for Earthquake Hazards and the Research Center for Disaster Reduction Systems, and based in Mexico at the Kyoto University On-site Laboratory International Research Laboratory for Earthquake and Tsunami Risk Cognition and Reduction. Originally from Lithuania, she holds a BA in Political Science, an MA in International Communications and Development (City, University of London), and a PhD from the University of Greenwich on human behavior in response to wildfire evacuations. She also has professional experience in fire engineering at Arup (London). Her work sits at the intersection of social science and engineering, with the aim of advancing research that improves human safety in natural hazards.