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Cognitive and Computational Aspects of Marine Incident Situation Management System - the Canadian Coast Guard Use Case - | IEEE Conference Publication | IEEE Xplore

Cognitive and Computational Aspects of Marine Incident Situation Management System - the Canadian Coast Guard Use Case -


Abstract:

Decision making situations in emergency management are usually characterised by participation and collaboration of multiple actors with sometimes different competences an...Show More

Abstract:

Decision making situations in emergency management are usually characterised by participation and collaboration of multiple actors with sometimes different competences and knowledge, lacking information and/or having uncertain information. Hence, there is a need for a coherent and effective collaboration leading to shared awareness and decision support in a timely manner. This can be achieved with a collaborative incident case management platform that permits all levels of response hierarchy supporting the Concepts of Operations (CONOPS) and which complies with the measures of every agency involved bringing all responders together toward a unified efficient response.This paper considers the Canadian Coast Guard (CCG) use case in Marine Incident response system on a large scale, its inconsistencies, redundancies, gaps, and misalignments, and proposes a novel collaborative marine incident Case Management System (CMS) for shared situational awareness and decision making in marine incident management. The marine incident CMS is developed with a single approach to incident management using the Scenario Based Design (SBD) methodology and a root cause analysis to review, compare past incidents and their associated After Action Review (AAR) as well as Cognitive Task Analyses (CTAs) to validate use-case scenarios. The cognitive and computational aspects of the proposed systems are presented and discussed.
Date of Conference: 07-10 May 2024
Date Added to IEEE Xplore: 12 June 2024
ISBN Information:
Conference Location: Montreal, QC, Canada

References

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