EMBARGOED UNTIL 8AM ON JULY 7, 2026
Herndon, VA, (July 7, 2026) — For U.S. coastal residents, storm surge is among the deadliest hurricane hazards, causing catastrophic property damage and loss of life; and scientists expect tropical storms to grow more intense. During Hurricane Ian in 2022, storm surge accounted for 41 of the 66 direct deaths. The 2026 Atlantic hurricane season is now underway, and while NOAA expects below-normal activity, emergency managers caution that it only takes one storm to devastate a community. A recent study published in Risk Analysis, finds that among residents living in flood-prone areas, place attachment is strongly related to protective action.
A research team from the National Science Foundation National Center for Atmospheric Research (NSF NCAR) surveyed 1,442 residents in Georgia and South Carolina in areas at risk of storm surge. Respondents were asked about two main factors—their connection to place and different map depictions of hurricane storm surge—to learn how these factors related to their hurricane risk perceptions and intended behavioral responses. Researchers measured six dimensions of risk perception and four types of behavioral intentions, including evacuation, taking protective actions, listening to weather forecasts, and abiding by local officials’ recommendations before a storm hits.
KEY FINDINGS
“Geophysical hazards, like hurricanes, threaten people in the place they call home,” said Julie Demuth, senior scientist in the Mesoscale and Microscale Meteorology Laboratory at the NSF National Center for Atmospheric Research and lead author of the study. “That emotional and cognitive connection provides us insight into decision-making processes and can help officials to better keep their communities safe in high-risk coastal areas.”
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About Risk AnalysisRisk Analysis is a peer-reviewed journal, publishing original research on the assessment and management of risks across disciplines including public health, engineering, environmental science, social science and policy. Risk Analysis, founded in 1980, is published by Wiley on behalf of the Society for Risk Analysis.
For more information, visit https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/journal/15396924.
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