The role of avalanche education in assessing and judging avalanche risk factors
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https://hdl.handle.net/10037/27601Dato
2022-07-07Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Sammendrag
Avalanche decision-making falls into two general categories; probabilistic approaches and analytical approaches. Analytical approaches have traditionally been considered applicable to experts
only, as they require assessing risk factors precisely and understanding their relevance in each
situation. In this study we question this assumption. We asked 1,220 amateur backcountry recreationalists how relevant they rated and how precisely they could assess 11 avalanche risk factors.
We investigated how their avalanche education and experience with avalanche incidents influenced
their judgment of precision and relevance, and if avalanches become more predictable with more
knowledge. Most recreationalists considered avalanches as predictable. These five factors were
judged as highly relevant: signs of instability, distinguishing avalanche terrain from non-avalanche
terrain, slope inclination, terrain traps, and distribution of weak layers. Relevance was independent
of avalanche education and experience of incidents for all factors but danger level. Amateur recreationalists rated the relevance of the factors like that of experts. Rating of precision increased with
more avalanche education, in particularly for these factors: distribution of the weak layers, terrain
traps, avalanche size, recognizing avalanche terrain and stopping at safe spots. We recommend
adopting an analytical approach for amateur backcountry recreationalists and discuss implications
for avalanche forecasting and education.
Forlag
Cappelen Damm AkademiskSitering
Landrø, Engeset, Pfuhl. The role of avalanche education in assessing and judging avalanche risk factors. Journal for Research in Arts and Sports Education. 2022Metadata
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