Title :
Linguistic analysis of Japanese tsunami evacuation calls
Author :
Naomi Ogasawara;Jason Ginsburg
Author_Institution :
Center for Language Research, University of Aizu, Aizuwakamatsu, Fukushima, JAPAN
Abstract :
Tsunami evacuation calls were collected from 38 autonomous bodies in Japan and categorized into `preparation´, `advisory´, and `directive´ categories based on the urgency level. This study analyzed these calls from a linguistic viewpoint in terms of language quantity, sentence complexity, and information types included in a call. The analysis obtained the following results: 1) the amount and complexity of language increases as the urgency level increases; 2) many of the local governments adopt the same terms for tsunami alerts used by the Weather Bureau instead of using the legal terms `preparation´, `advisory´, or `directive´; 3) most evacuation orders in a call are expressed as requests (“Please do ~”) instead of as imperatives; and 4) there are no significant differences in sentences and content used in advisory calls compared with directive calls.
Keywords :
"Cities and towns","Tsunami","Pragmatics","Complexity theory","Manuals","Compounds","Guidelines"
Conference_Titel :
Information and Communication Technologies for Disaster Management (ICT-DM), 2015 2nd International Conference on
DOI :
10.1109/ICT-DM.2015.7402040