Members of the Resilient HydroTwin project team recently participated in ISCRAM 2026 (Information Systems for Crisis Response and Management), where they presented their latest work on flood emergency mobility and behavioral modeling.
As part of the Critical Infrastructure Resilience track, the team shared research on the use of behavioral archetypes to represent heterogeneous human responses during flood emergencies. The work highlights the importance of incorporating heterogenous human behavior into modeling frameworks to support more realistic evacuation analysis and decision-making.
The conference provided an excellent opportunity to exchange ideas with researchers and practitioners working on crisis management, infrastructure resilience, and information systems. These discussions further reinforce the Resilient HydroTwin project's commitment to developing digital twin solutions that integrate physical processes and human dynamics to enhance resilience to compound flood events.