Erica Kuligowski is a social research scientist who studies human behavior during emergencies and the performance of evacuation models in disasters. She currently works at the Engineering Lab of the National Institute of Standards and Technology conducting research on fire disasters and leading the NIST Hurricane Maria Project.
Kuligowski currently works at National Institute of Standards and Technology in the Engineering Lab as a research social scientist. Her work focuses on human behavior in response to emergency situations and currently conducts research for the Wildland-Urban Interface Fire Group as well as serving as the Team Lead for the NIST Hurricane Maria Project. Recent work includes research into infrastructure failure during the hurricane, and what could be improved to increase resiliency in similar emergencies. For WUI, Kuligowski is working on a project to assess emergency communications during the Chimney Tops 2 Fire of November, 2016. Previously, Kuligowski worked on three different NIST research teams including two years with the Community Resilience Group. Her work involved educating communities on how to build resiliency through the assessment of structures in terms of their social or economic importance. Kuligowski has also done research on fire emergency drills and responses, particularly regarding egress models. In 2010, she published "A Review of Building Evacuation Models: 2nd Edition" which reviews different egress drills in order to decide which is appropriate for a given building or situation. Kuligowski was an editor for Pedestrian and Evacuation Dynamics in addition to SFPEHandbook of Fire Protection Engineering. Her work also includes studies on the World Trade Center attack on September 11th. Her dissertation titled "Terror Defeated: Occupant Sensemaking, Decision-Making, and Protective Action in the 2001 World Trade Center Disaster" addresses pre-evacuation behavior and assessment during the largest building evacuation in history.
Awards and honors
In 2014, Erica Kuligowski was awarded the Harry C. Bigglestone Award for a paper entitled "Predicting Human Behavior During Fires," which discusses evacuation models and potential for improvement through analysis of occupant decision making. She won the award again in 2017 along with the group of researchers who published "Assessing the Verification and Validation of Building Fire Evacuation Models," which outlines possible verification and validation tests as a means of determining the efficacy of evacuation models. From her work at NIST, she earned two US DOC Gold Medals for her research on evacuation during the 2001 World Trade Center disaster and emergency communication during the 2011 tornado in Joplin, Missouri.
Publications
"SFPE Handbook of Fire Protection Engineering," Springer, January, 2016
"Assessing the Verification and Validation of Building Fire Evacuation Models," Fire Technology, January, 2016
"Predicting Human Behavior During Fires," Fire Technology, November, 2013
"Metaphors Matter: Disaster Myths, Media Frames and Their Consequences in Hurricane Katrina," SAGE Journals, March, 2006