Forecasting catastrophic stratovolcano collapse: A model based on Mount Taranaki, New Zealand

Geology ◽  
2012 ◽  
Vol 40 (11) ◽  
pp. 983-986 ◽  
Author(s):  
Anke V. Zernack ◽  
Shane J. Cronin ◽  
Mark S. Bebbington ◽  
Richard C. Price ◽  
Ian E.M. Smith ◽  
...  
Keyword(s):  
1996 ◽  
Vol 20 (1) ◽  
pp. 16-23 ◽  
Author(s):  
Murray Ryburn ◽  
Celia Atherton

The quality of relationship between families and professionals is clearly crucial to the development of good social work practice, especially where the care and protection of children are concerned. After tracing the origins of the Family Group Conference in New Zealand, Murray Ryburn and Celia Atherton describe the procedure and explain how this model, based on a commitment to partnership, is being adapted and used in the UK.


1998 ◽  
Vol 68 (3) ◽  
pp. 413-434 ◽  
Author(s):  
B. Jones ◽  
R. W. Renaut ◽  
M. R. Rosen
Keyword(s):  

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
◽  
Christian Stock

<p>For the development of earthquake occurrence models, historical earthquake catalogues and compilations of mapped, active faults are often used. The goal of this study is to develop new methodologies for the generation of an earthquake occurrence model for New Zealand that is consistent with both data sets. For the construction of a seismological earthquake occurrence model based on the historical earthquake record, 'adaptive kernel estimation' has been used in this study. Based on this method a technique has been introduced to filter temporal sequences (e.g. aftershocks). Finally, a test has been developed for comparing different earthquake occurrence models. It has been found that the adaptive kernel estimation with temporal sequence filtering gives the best joint fit between the earthquake catalogue and the earthquake occurrence model, and between two earthquake occurrence models obtained from data from two independent time intervals. For the development of a geological earthquake occurrence model based on fault information, earthquake source relationships (i.e. rupture length versus rupture width scaling) have been revised. It has been found that large dip-slip and strike-slip earthquakes scale differently. Using these source relationships a dynamic stochastic fault model has been introduced. Whereas earthquake hazard studies often do not allow individual fault segments to produce compound ruptures, this model allows the linking of fault segments by chance. The moment release of simulated fault ruptures has been compared with the theoretical deformation along the plate boundary. When comparing the seismological and the geological earthquake occurrence model, it has been found that a 'good' occurrence model for large dip-slip earthquakes is given by the seismological occurrence model using the Gutenberg-Richter magnitude frequency distribution. In contrast, regions dominated by long strike-slip faults produce large earthquakes but not many small earthquakes and the occurrence of earthquakes on such faults should be inferred from the dynamic fault model.</p>


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
◽  
Petra Parker-Price

<p>Making within architecture encompasses many definitions and modes, but these are often at some distance from the production of buildings. IE architect’s ‘make’ drawings and models, but a builder makes a building. This thesis explores the benefits and liabilities of bridging between imagining and enacting architectural production thought the design and build of a ‘tiny house’. Via an analysis of craft, symbol, processes and experience, the research begins with the activities of ‘the hands’ in architectural production. From here the mode of micro-architecture – specifically, a client driven ‘tiny house’ - is investigated and implemented as an example of research-by-making. A theoretical and model-based concept for the design of the ‘tiny house’ was developed, from which research by-making could be conducted. The Build Phase, comprising the most significant aspect of this research, was then implemented, with commentary and reflection. Although this approach is not without its limitations as a proxy for practice based making, it facilitates a greater range of making considerations than conventional studio-based production. In this way this project makes and advances an alternative design-research while advocating for learning by making.</p>


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
◽  
Christian Stock

<p>For the development of earthquake occurrence models, historical earthquake catalogues and compilations of mapped, active faults are often used. The goal of this study is to develop new methodologies for the generation of an earthquake occurrence model for New Zealand that is consistent with both data sets. For the construction of a seismological earthquake occurrence model based on the historical earthquake record, 'adaptive kernel estimation' has been used in this study. Based on this method a technique has been introduced to filter temporal sequences (e.g. aftershocks). Finally, a test has been developed for comparing different earthquake occurrence models. It has been found that the adaptive kernel estimation with temporal sequence filtering gives the best joint fit between the earthquake catalogue and the earthquake occurrence model, and between two earthquake occurrence models obtained from data from two independent time intervals. For the development of a geological earthquake occurrence model based on fault information, earthquake source relationships (i.e. rupture length versus rupture width scaling) have been revised. It has been found that large dip-slip and strike-slip earthquakes scale differently. Using these source relationships a dynamic stochastic fault model has been introduced. Whereas earthquake hazard studies often do not allow individual fault segments to produce compound ruptures, this model allows the linking of fault segments by chance. The moment release of simulated fault ruptures has been compared with the theoretical deformation along the plate boundary. When comparing the seismological and the geological earthquake occurrence model, it has been found that a 'good' occurrence model for large dip-slip earthquakes is given by the seismological occurrence model using the Gutenberg-Richter magnitude frequency distribution. In contrast, regions dominated by long strike-slip faults produce large earthquakes but not many small earthquakes and the occurrence of earthquakes on such faults should be inferred from the dynamic fault model.</p>


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
◽  
Pranay Panta

<p><b>This dissertation contains three essays on economic analysis of the New Zealand healthcare market particularly relating to publicly funded elective surgeries and the pharmaceutical industry.</b></p> <p>In Chapter 1, using administrative data on all patients booked for publicly funded elective surgery in 2014, we investigate whether ethnic disparities exist in waiting time for elective surgeries in New Zealand. Unlike existing studies on the topic, we extensively control for sample selection bias, clinical severity, and regional factors affecting resource supply and healthcare utilization. We find evidence of Maori, Pacific, and Asian patients waiting longer for elective surgery when com-pared to New Zealand Europeans. Our results indicate that Maori wait on average 3 percent longer for elective surgery, however, they are not consistent across all model specifications. We find that Pacific and Asian patients wait 8 - 9 percent longer for elective surgeries compared to NZE. Our results are considerably stronger for Pacific and Asian compared to Maori across all model specifications. Furthermore, these differences are pervasive across several surgical categories and are as high as 22 percent across angiography procedures. We also find evidence that waiting time in New Zealand is geographically inequitable. Although an increasing number of empirical studies find evidence of inequities in waiting time socioeconomic status, our analysis reveals no such effects once regional differences affecting waiting time are controlled for.</p> <p>In Chapter 2, using administrative data on patients who have been booked and treated for publicly funded elective surgeries over 2011-2015, we investigate how supply of and demand for elective surgeries respond to waiting times in New Zealand. Unlike existing studies, we endogenize waiting times in a system of three equations, which nests the conventional demand-and-supply model. Each structural equation is over-identified by excluded instruments, and the exclusion restriction is justified on a priori grounds while over-identifying restrictions are tested. The analysis finds that, in the case of New Zealand, the demand for elective surgery is inelastic, whereas supply is elastic. From a policy perspective, the results suggest that a long-term increase in supply will lead to a permanent reduction in waiting times and thus improving timely access to care.</p> <p>In Chapter 3, I develop an intuitive model based on the traditional newsvendor framework that enables pharmaceutical wholesalers to efficiently forecast demand and reduce inventory while adjusting for required customer service level (CSL) targets. First, using historical demand data for a major pharmaceutical wholesaler in New Zealand, I present several demand forecasting models and assess their performance in predicting demand, based on several forecast error metrics. I find that artificial neural network (ANN) models are generally stable for demand forecasting and sometimes outperform traditional demand forecasting methods. Second, using the demand fore-cast as an input, I derive a periodic review inventory model based on the newsvendor inventory framework. Numerical analysis of the proposed model shows that, compared to current practice, the model enables wholesalers to significantly reduce both inventory levels and ordering, while maintaining a very high non-stock-out probability constraint and CSL target close to 100 percent. I conduct separate analyses for both government subsidized low value-high demand drug and non-subsidized low demand-high value drug and find the results to be consistent across both types of drugs.</p>


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