Publication | Open Access
Methodologies Employed in the Collection, Retrieval and Storage of Human Factors Information Derived from First Hand Accounts of Survivors of the WTC Disaster of 11 September 2001
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2006
Year
EngineeringEmergency ManagementSafety ScienceWtc DisasterHigh-rise BuildingsJournalismPsychologyBuilt EnvironmentData ScienceContent AnalysisMass DisasterSeptember 2001Disaster ResponseFirst Hand AccountsEmergency PreparednessEvacuation PlanningProject HeedDisaster ManagementDisaster ResearchSeptember 11Crisis ManagementMedicineDisaster Risk ReductionEmergency CommunicationEmergency Medicine
This article provides a broad overview of project HEED (High-rise Evacuation Evaluation Database) and the methodologies employed in the collection and storage of first-hand accounts of evacuation experiences derived from face-to-face interviews of evacuees from the World Trade Center (WTC) Twin Towers complex on September 11, 2001. In particular, the article describes the development of the HEED database. This is a flexible research tool which contains qualitative type data in the form of coded evacuee experiences along with the full interview transcripts. The data and information captured and stored in the HEED database is not only unique, but provides a means to address current and emerging issues relating to human factors associated with the evacuation of high-rise buildings