Earthquake insurance can be a useful tool to build more sustainable societies and disaster-resilient communities. However, the coverage is not common in many countries. This article aims to contribute to the literature through an empirical analysis of the online interest in earthquake insurance through Google Trends. The proposed methodology implies to move from a top-down conceptual approach to a bottom-up/data-enabled one. It allows us to explore potential triggers and dynamic patterns of online interest in earthquake insurance at daily time-scale through the lens of Big Data. In order to validate the methodology, the article considers Italy as a test area. For this country, where the coverage rate is low, we fuse multiple databases to create 16-year daily time series of public search activities about the insurance in Italy and analyse it with other data sources. As a result, the peak analysis shows a connection with the occurrences of large domestic earthquakes, overseas earthquakes, and policy decisions, which create time windows of opportunities for insurers and policymakers to boost the public's motivation towards the coverages. The research outcomes suggest that the data-enabled approach can additionally be applied in other countries where the coverage rate is low and stakeholders are facing the challenge to strive against earthquake under-insurance.

Time windows of opportunities to fight earthquake under-insurance: evidence from Google Trends

Gizzi FT
Primo
Conceptualization
;
2020

Abstract

Earthquake insurance can be a useful tool to build more sustainable societies and disaster-resilient communities. However, the coverage is not common in many countries. This article aims to contribute to the literature through an empirical analysis of the online interest in earthquake insurance through Google Trends. The proposed methodology implies to move from a top-down conceptual approach to a bottom-up/data-enabled one. It allows us to explore potential triggers and dynamic patterns of online interest in earthquake insurance at daily time-scale through the lens of Big Data. In order to validate the methodology, the article considers Italy as a test area. For this country, where the coverage rate is low, we fuse multiple databases to create 16-year daily time series of public search activities about the insurance in Italy and analyse it with other data sources. As a result, the peak analysis shows a connection with the occurrences of large domestic earthquakes, overseas earthquakes, and policy decisions, which create time windows of opportunities for insurers and policymakers to boost the public's motivation towards the coverages. The research outcomes suggest that the data-enabled approach can additionally be applied in other countries where the coverage rate is low and stakeholders are facing the challenge to strive against earthquake under-insurance.
2020
Istituto di Scienze del Patrimonio Culturale - ISPC - Sede Secondaria Potenza
Inglese
7
1
11
https://www.nature.com/articles/s41599-020-0532-2#citeas
Esperti anonimi
insurance
big data
Google Trends
natural hazards
earthquake
seismic risk
risk mitigation
abruzzo earthquake
central italy earthquake
emilia earthquake
Il patrimonio costruito, storico, monumentale e residenziale rappresenta la nostra identità, contribuisce al benessere personale e sociale e allo sviluppo dell'economia locale. Il patrimonio, comunque, è minacciato dai disastri “naturali”. L’assicurazione contro i rischi naturali può essere uno strumento valido per costruire società più sostenibili e resilienti. La ricerca introduce per la prima volta nell’ambito degli studi sulle assicurazioni la metodologia propria dell’Infodemiologia. L’articolo ha un elevato impatto nella comunità scientifica, con 24 citazioni (agosto 2024) che consentono all’articolo di collocarsi al 94° percentile con un FWCI 3.62 ("Field-Weighted Citation Impact shows how well cited this document is when compared to similar documents. A value greater than 1.00 means the document is more cited than expected according to the average", fonte Scopus), indicando che l’articolo è molto più citato del previsto secondo la media. Inoltre, gli autori che citano l’articolo sono 81, afferenti a 10 differenti nazioni; questi autori hanno pubblicato i loro prodotti in riviste ricoprenti complessivamente 16 differenti aree di ricerca, a testimoniare la trasversalità della metodologia. L’articolo contribuisce anche al Sustainable Development Goals, Affordable and clean energy Goal 17, Partnership for the goals (fonte: Scopus). La ricerca importa e adatta alle assicurazioni contro le calamità “naturali” la prassi metodologico-scientifica propria dell'Infodemiologia, la scienza che studia la distribuzione delle informazioni e i fattori determinanti che sono all'origine delle informazioni stesse in internet, con il fine di supportare la sanità pubblica e la politica. Con ottica similare, la ricerca fornisce supporto ai portatori di interesse e ai decisori politici per ridurre la sottoassicurazione del patrimonio costruito, sia culturale sia minore, e per la “protezione” dei centri storici.
Internazionale
Elettronico
3
info:eu-repo/semantics/article
262
Gizzi, Ft; Kam, J; Porrini, D
01 Contributo su Rivista::01.01 Articolo in rivista
open
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Descrizione: Time windows of opportunities to fight earthquake under-insurance: evidence from Google Trends
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14243/385927
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social impact