Knowledge-based Education and Awareness about the Radiological
and Nuclear Hazards
Anca Daniela Ionita
a
, Adriana Olteanu
b
and Radu Nicolae Pietraru
c
University Politehnica of Bucharest, Spl. Independentei 313, 060042, Bucharest, Romania
Keywords: Knowledge Representation, Rule-based Systems, Education and Training.
Abstract: There are multiple approaches to organize and formalize the knowledge related to nuclear accidents,
emergency situations and management of hazards. However, in general, the materials available for
educational and awareness purposes are not directly linked to an organized knowledge base. This paper shows
our studies on representing and using the experts’ knowledge on radiological and nuclear risks, with the
purpose of making it more accessible to junior students and to other interested stakeholders. This effort
resulted in an ontology of nuclear vulnerabilities, a set of rules, and processes for prevention, protection and
emergency response, useful for understanding the decisions made by responsible institutions. These
representations were applied in the development of a platform for informal education and awareness.
1 INTRODUCTION
All over the world, government agencies, local
officials, nuclear plant owners and other stakeholders
are directly interested in creating education and
awareness about the radiological and nuclear hazards.
This concern was also present in the key messages
launched in 2013 by the International Federation of
Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies (IFRCRCS) to
increase public awareness and public education for
disaster risk reduction.
The occurrence of severe nuclear accidents in
Eastern Europe and Asia, as well as the problems
raised by radioactive waste, have increased the
general concern on nuclear power plants safety, up to
discussing the acceptance by the large public of this
form of producing energy (Bing et al., 2013). Apart
from establishing and maintaining radiation
protection measures in nuclear power plants, there are
also issues like environment protection, climate
change and potential conflicts between technological
and social development, leading to the analysis of the
people’s risk awareness. Thus, the studies show that
safety goals and public acceptance have a direct
impact on each other (Li et al, 2012). Whereas the
geographic proximity to a nuclear facility influences
a
https://orcid.org/0000-0002-8966-6196
b
https://orcid.org/0000-0002-7057-7281
c
https://orcid.org/0000-0002-6986-5163
the interest towards the nuclear energy and the
awareness of the induced vulnerabilities, it has not
been proven to be an important factor in the
acceptance of its usage (Cale and Kromer, 2015).
However, the attitude changes for the population
living in the vulnerability area of a former nuclear
accident. Kitada (2016) analysed the results of
multiple surveys realized in Japan, before and after
the Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Power Plant accident.
After the event, the negative opinions about nuclear
power increased; people were discussing more about
renewable energies and tended to focus on the
accident risks. The perception of nuclear energy risks
in Taiwan and Hong Kong were also studied in
(Grano, 2014). Similarly to Japan, they are seismic
countries, densely populated and with nuclear power
plants located side by side to urban centres, or in close
proximity to numerous underwater volcanoes. The
paper presents the implication of the government and
media in disseminating crucial information and
influencing public opinion and perception of risk.
Education on natural disasters in general also has its
impact in this respect (Smawfield and Ed, 2013).
The idea supported in this paper is that education
and awareness can also be created in correlation with
formalized knowledge regarding the management of
154
Ionita, A., Olteanu, A. and Pietraru, R.
Knowledge-based Education and Awareness about the Radiological and Nuclear Hazards.
DOI: 10.5220/0008165301540163
In Proceedings of the 11th International Joint Conference on Knowledge Discovery, Knowledge Engineering and Knowledge Management (IC3K 2019), pages 154-163
ISBN: 978-989-758-382-7
Copyright
c
2019 by SCITEPRESS Science and Technology Publications, Lda. All rights reserved
hazards, crisis situations, and disasters, currently
existing in a multitude of representations, or newly
created for education and awareness purposes.
Section 2 summarizes the existing background and
related work, Section 3 presents the knowledge
representations, composed of: an ontology, a set of
rules, and processes regarding the management of
radiological and nuclear hazards. Section 4 shows the
application of the formalized knowledge in the
development of a platform for education and
awareness concerns.
2 BACKGROUND AND RELATED
WORK
For the knowledge of our domain of interest, a major
contribution comes from the International Atomic
Energy Agency (IAEA), who also published a
“Nuclear Accident Knowledge Taxonomy” (IAEA,
2016), along with many other reports,
recommendations and guides. Other research-
oriented approaches also exist, like the nuclear or
radiological emergency ontology presented in
(Konstantopoulos and Ikonomopoulos, 2015).
Due to the increasing role of social media in any
crisis situation, including those related to natural
hazards, one also proposed an ontology to help
dealing with the exceeding media content and
extracting situational information (Moi et al, 2016).
A comprehensive review of the state of the art in crisis
management ontologies is given in (Liu et al., 2013),
identifying a set of critical subject areas that cover the
information concepts involved in crisis management,
such as resources, processes, people, organizations,
damage, disasters, infrastructure and geography.
The knowledge bases used in disaster situations
were studied in (Hristidis et al., 2010), based on an
analysis that goes across several Information
Technology areas: data integration and ingestion,
information extraction, information retrieval,
information filtering, data mining and decision
support. Based on the integration of seven existing
vocabularies or ontologies, Gaur et al. (2019)
proposed an ontology relevant for hazard situational
awareness and emergency management, interlinked
with other nine external vocabularies.
A milestone in the European Union was the
development of RODOS (Real-time Online DecisiOn
Support) system for nuclear emergency management
(Bartzis et al., 2000). Its main objectives are to
provide integrated methodological bases, develop
models and databases, and install common hardware
and software frameworks for forecasting the
consequences of an accident and supporting
decisions. The role of multi-criterion analysis to
ensure transparency of the decision-making process
in the management of emergency situations was
described in (Geldermann et al., 2009).
There have also been efforts towards an integrated
approach of hazards, including Chemical, Biological,
Radiological and Nuclear (CBRN), with integrated
monitoring, warning and alerting solutions. Sentinel
Asia is such an example, functioning since 2005,
sharing data from earth observations and in-situ
measurements, and creating a link between the space
and the disaster reduction communities, at
international level (Kaku and Held, 2013). The
European Commission also supported multiple
projects for an integrated management of crisis
situations and for correlated responses in case of
disasters (2017). Such efforts are also related to
another concern at the international level - the
creation of situation awareness tools, to provide a
clear perception of a disaster scenario, and to improve
decision support and the relations between the
involved actors and the environmental factors
(Pavković et al., 2014).
Knowledge engineering was also used in
developing software related to the nuclear energy.
Applications where ontologies were used to
significantly increase the number and the variety of
scenarios for detecting special nuclear materials,
based on a set of initial descriptions, were presented
in (Ward et al., 2011) and (Sorokine et al., 2015). A
web portal for sharing knowledge about nuclear
reactors was described in (Madurai Meenachi and Sai
Baba, 2014); the ontology, represented with Protégé
in OWL, includes concepts about neutron energy,
steam generator detection and protection, control rod
drive mechanisms etc. Furthermore, the design of
nuclear power plants is governed by rules that may be
expressed in ontological models, using for instance
the Semantic Web Rule Language (SWRL) as a
standard language (Fortineau et al., 2012).
3 KNOWLEDGE ON
RADIOLOGICAL AND
NUCLEAR HAZARDS
3.1 Methodology
Our work was performed with the purpose to share
knowledge on radiological and nuclear hazards with
stakeholders concerned of these risks but having
Knowledge-based Education and Awareness about the Radiological and Nuclear Hazards
155
medium to zero scientific background on such topics.
In our collaboration with professors teaching nuclear
technology and with researchers from a physics and
nuclear engineering institute, we first played the part
of software engineers for developing an educational
and awareness platform, but soon discovered that we
were also among the potential users of such a
platform. It was challenging for them to select which
were the basic concepts to be explained and what was
important from the point of view of people who may
have a technical background but are not accustomed
with the specificities of this domain. Our task
consisted in organising the relevant knowledge that
was selected by our partners, and of identifying the
connections between concepts that would help for an
easier understanding and then for a better navigability
within the platform. Furthermore, we wanted to go
beyond getting accustomed to a basic terminology
and to introduce some insights into the judgement
criteria of the relevant authorities, because this might
increase the population cooperativeness and trust, and
might also offer the possibility to check the validity
of some decisions one may be directly affected by.
This is particularly important in our country, due to
the operation of a nuclear power plant and the
proximity of other nuclear facilities that may induce
further territorial vulnerabilities (Lazaro et al., 2017).
The work resulted in: a) an ontology to organize
the resources for informal education and awareness
about the radiological and nuclear hazards; b) the
design of a rule-based simulator dedicated to non-
specialists, based on criteria, activities and threshold
levels conforming to the reccomendations of IAEA
(International Atomic Energy Agency); c) the formal
representation of processes to be followed for
prevention, protection and emergency response
situations.
The knowledge representation was realized in
multiple languages, including: UML (Unified
Modeling Language), OWL (Web Ontology
Language), XML (Extensible Markup Language) and
BPMN (Business Process Model and Notation). They
were then applied for realizing a TikiWiki platform,
including semantic links, and a tool to simulate the
authorities’ decisions in a variety of situations related
to radiological and nuclear vulnerabilities. The
platform was also used by students in Power
Engineering who chose the Nuclear Power Plant
program (Ionita et al., 2016).
3.2 The Nuclear-Watch Ontology
Based on the selection made by specialists in nuclear
engineering and physics, we represented a set of
concepts that are relevant for understanding the
nuclear and radiological vulnerabilities and for
creating awareness. The work was part of a project
developing prediction tools for the influence of
radioactive clouds on the territory situated in the near
and far field of a nuclear facility (N-WATCHDOG,
2017). Thus, our aim was to offer support for
education and awareness, necessary for understating
and testing the project results, and not to elaborate an
exhaustive ontology, because, this would have to
cover multiple domains that are already characterized
by a very detailed terminology. We worked on the
basis of a glossary with four categories of concepts:
Hazard Management
Emergency management
Organizational structure and
Nuclear and radiological reference terms.
This knowledge was structured in the Nuclear-
Watch ontology, covering the scope of education and
awareness (see Figure 1). We added two kinds of
relationships: on the one hand, there are the
relationships between the Nuclear-Watch concepts,
on the other hand, there are correspondences to
concepts from other ontologies representing
knowledge from related domains, for validation
purposes. One of them is VuWiki (Vulnerability
Ontology 1.0) (Khazai et al., 2014) - a selection of
concepts to which we identified correspondences is
light-coloured represented in Figure 1, as opposed to
our coloured concepts. The Nuclear-Watch ontology
was also represented in OWL, using Protégé.
The concepts selected in the representation from
Figure 1 and pertaining to the first three categories –
Emergency management, Hazard management and
Organizational structure – are explained below.
For the Hazard category we selected the following
concepts relevant for awareness:
Hazard management system – represents an
assembly of physical, software and human
components for monitoring, processing and
visualization of specific hazards;
Alert system – supports the decision and
communication of alerts in case of disastrous
events having happened;
Early warning system – covers strategic,
technical and operational aspects, with the
purpose of avoiding or reducing the disastrous
effects; its conception and realization
considerably depends on the type of hazard,
with a clear differentiation between rapid-onset
threats, like nuclear plant failures, and slow-
onset threats, like climate change (UNEP,
2012);
KEOD 2019 - 11th International Conference on Knowledge Engineering and Ontology Development
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Data processing
Hazard monitoring
Data visualization
Emergency situation
Population
protection
Emergency situation
response
Decision system Communication
Emergency situation
intervention
Risk management Alert messages
Legal framework
Institutional
framework
Early warning
system
Alert system
Realize
Is part of
incl udes
has monitoring
Emergency
management
Refers to
Is based on
Is used for
Hazard management
system
Has processing
realize
Conforms to
Is o perat ed by
Is kind of
Is kind of
Has visualization
Is realized for
Is realized through
Vulnerability assessment/
Methodological approach/
Operational approach/ Data
analysis
Corresponds to
Vulnerability assessment/
Methodological approach/
Operational approach/ Data
collection
Vulnerability assessment/
Methodological approach/ Operational
approach/ Data Analysis// Mapping
(spatial or tem poral)
Corresponds to
Vulnerability assessment/
Methodological approach/
Theoretical approach/
Definition of vulnerability
Has definition
Vulnerability assessment/
Reference framework of
assess ment / Target users/
Civil protection
Corresponds to
Vulnerability assessment/
Methodological approach/
Theoretical approach/ Related
theoretical concepts / Risk
Corresponds to
Is based on
Corresponds to
Is used for
Is used for
Emergency Hazard
Organization
Figure 1: Selection of concepts from the Nuclear-Watch ontology.
Hazard monitoring – is specific to the type of
hazard and may be realized with diverse
measuring instruments, like sensors, satellites,
spectrometers, thermometers etc.);
Data processing – is performed for a variety of
goals: estimation of derived physical
quantities, prediction, risk assessment, risk
mitigation, organizing and storing data for
historical purposes, transforming data for
communication purposes (Ionita and Olteanu,
2014);
Data visualization – uses data acquired at
hazard monitoring and includes maps, graphs,
tables, color-coded advisories, video images.
For the Emergency category, the concepts
considered are:
Emergency management – represents the
overall organization of resources for dealing
with emergency situations, possibly realized by
existing hazard management systems; a
collection of twenty-six definitions of
emergency management, along with a
comprehensive presentation of the related
terminology, are given in (Wayne Blanchard,
2008) and (Khorram-Manesh, 2017);
Population protection – is performed when a
hazard-related event happened, but the effects
do not require emergency reactions; in the case
of nuclear vulnerabilities, the protection may
consist in sheltering, iodine administration, or
temporary relocation;
Emergency situation – is characterized of a
significant augmentation of the risks to which
the population and the personnel working in the
affected facility are exposed to;
Emergency situation response – stands in the
identification and classification of an
emergency, followed by alert and activation of
the authorities responsible with emergency
management;
Emergency situation intervention – includes
concrete actions performed by emergency
professionals and other organizations, like
national, regional and local authorities;
Decision system – offers a computerized
support for decision making, based on risk
management, models and collections of data;
Risk management – is realized by
identification, evaluation and mitigation of
risks concerning the hazard of interest;
Communication – is used for emergency
situation response, to transmit alert messages to
authorities and other stakeholders, like
economic players in the affected territory,
subscribers or the large public;
Alert messages – realize the communication in
a form that is approved and well-formatted.
Knowledge-based Education and Awareness about the Radiological and Nuclear Hazards
157
For the organization category, the concepts
introduced in the ontology are:
Legal framework - consists of the main laws
and government orders to which the emergency
management and a hazard management system
must conform to;
Institutional framework – is an assembly of
resources and organizations created for
managing emergencies at regional, national or
international levels.
The fourth category, nuclear and radiological
reference terms, includes concepts related to
radiations, environment radioactivity and nuclear
security, accessible to people having a technical
background (high school level); a presentation of
more advanced terms about nuclear emergencies is
given in (Vamanu and Acasandrei, 2014).
3.3 Rules for Prevention, Protection
and Emergency Response
This section describes the knowledge of a rule-based
system (Nowak-Brzezińska and Wakulicz-Deja,
2019) to simulate the decisions to be taken by
responsible authorities and to create awareness on the
nuclear vulnerabilities. We extracted what can be
expressed as a set of rules from the criteria defined
for preparedness and response for a nuclear or
radiological emergency. They were identified based
on reports of the International Atomic Energy Agency
(IAEA, 2005) (
IAEA, 2011).
Figure 2 represents concepts identified in the
nuclear and radiological emergency domain that can
be used for defining rules, represented as a UML
(Unified Modeling Language) class diagram. The
rules belong to six categories that depend on the dose
of radiation, which decreases from A (when “urgent
actions are always justified”) to F (when there are no
“generically justified actions”).
The rules depend on three types of risks, with the
meaning explained below:
R1 – concerning avertable doses that do not
affect population’s health, hence it is necessary
to take prevention measures;
R2 – when the population protection is
required due to larger values of projected
doses;
R3 – when the dose has already been received
and internal / external exposures are high, so
emergency response actions are necessary.
ThresholdCondition
thresholdCode:String
thresholdDose:Real
measuringUnit:UnitOfMeasurement
measuredQuantity:PhysicalQuantity
operation:LogicalOperation
exposureType:ExposureType
exposureTime:ExposureTime
deltaDays:Integer
note:String
constraint:String
1
TimeFrame
timeFrameCode:String
timeFrameName:String
multiplicity:Multplicity
0..1
Action
actionCode:String
actionName:String
target:ApplicationTarget
constraint:ActionConstraint
purpose:String
1..*
Rule
ruleCode:String
ruleBehavior(ThresholdCondition,
TimeFra me):Acti on[]
category:{A,B,C,D,E,F}
ris k:RiskType
<<Enumeration>>
UnitOfMeasurement
mSv
Sv
Gy-Eq
<<Enumeration>>
PhysicalQuantity
E_T
H_AnyOtherOrgan
H_Foetus
H_Skin
H_Thyroid
AD_Torso
AD_Tissue
AD_Foetus
AD_Skin
AD()_RedMarrow
<<Enumeration>>
RiskType
R1
R2
R3
<<Enumeration>>
ActionConstraint
Urgent
Temporary
LimitedArea
LimitedObjects
Discretionary
<<Enumeration>>
ExposureType
Internal
External
Immediately
Figure 2: Object-oriented representation of the concepts used in the rule-based system.
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Table 1: Part of the knowledge base for the rule-based system.
Rule
Code
“If-then” clauses
Premises Conclusion: Recommended Actions
Threshold
Conditions Time
frame
Risk
type
Rule_1
IF (Timeframe_1 AND
Threshold_1) THEN (Action_14)
E
T
5 mSv
1 year
R1
Action_14. Replacement of food, milk
and water
Rule_2
IF (Timeframe_1 AND
Threshold_2) THEN (Action_6
AND Action_16 AND Action_11)
E
T
>= 10 mSv
1 year
R3
OR
R2
Action_6. Limited area/object
decontamination
Action_16. Limited restriction of food,
milk and water consumption
Action_11. Public information
Rule_3
IF (Timeframe_8 AND
Threshold_2) THEN (Action_19)
E
T
>= 10mSv
2days
R1 Action_19. Sheltering
Rule_4
IF (Timeframe_3 AND
Threshold_3) THEN (Action_13
AND Action_7)
E
T
>= 30mSv
1month
R1
Action_13. Temporary relocation
Action_7. Discretionary
decontamination
Rule_5
IF (Timeframe_5 AND
Threshold_4) THEN (Action_8
AND Action_5 AND Action_15)
E
T
>= 50mSv
1 week
R1
Action_8. Evacuation
Action_5. Urgent decontamination
Action_15. Restriction of food, milk and
water consumption
Rule_6
IF (Timeframe_3 AND
(Threshold_5 OR
Threashold_11)) THEN
(Action_18 AND Action_1)
E
T
>= 0.1Sv
H
Thyroid
>= 50mSv
1 month
R3
Action_18. Screening based on
individual dose, to determine need for
registration for long term medical
follow-up
Action_1. Advice and basic counseling
Rule_7
IF (Timeframe_10 AND
Threshold_6) THEN (Action_10)
E
T
>= 1 Sv
lifetime
R1 Action_10. Permanent resettlement
Rule_8
IF (Timeframe_1 AND
Threshold_7) THEN (Action_6
AND Action_16 AND Action_11)
H
AnyOtherOrgan
>= 0.1
Sv
1 year
R3
OR
R2
Action_6. Limited area/object
decontamination
Action_16. Limited restriction of food,
milk and water consumption
Action_11. Public information
Rule_9
IF (Timeframe_4 AND
Threshold_9) THEN (Action_2)
H
Foetus
>= 0.1 Sv
Time frame =
months
R3
Action 2. Basic counselling to allow
informed decisions to be made in
individual circumstances
Rule_10
IF (Timeframe_4 AND
Threshold_9) THEN (Action_6
AND Action_16 AND Action_11)
H
Foetus
>= 0.1 Sv
Time frame =
months
R3
OR
R2
Action 6. Limited area/object
decontamination
Action 16. Limited restriction of food,
milk and water consumption
Action 11. Public information
Rule 11
IF (Timeframe_9 AND
Threshold_10) THEN (Action_3
AND Action_5)
H
Skin
>= 0.1Sv
Time frame = days
R1
Action3. Contamination control
Action 5. Urgent decontamination
A rule behaviour depends on a threshold value for
the radiation dose, in respect with the generic
reference levels adopted by IAEA, and the time frame
elapsed from the moment of the nuclear incident.
Thus, the premises of the rules are: a) the threshold
conditions regarding the radiation doses compared to
the specified reference levels, b) the time frames, and
c) the risk types.
Knowledge-based Education and Awareness about the Radiological and Nuclear Hazards
159
The conclusion resulted from applying these rules
is a set of actions recommended by IAEA, which are
supposed to be applied by the organizational
structures responsible with emergency management.
The rules are further defined as “if-then” clauses
and their codes have the form Rule_i, where i is the
index, as seen in the examples from Table 1. From the
analysis of IAEA specifications, we identified 25
rules that were included into the knowledge base.
There are 22 threshold conditions identified from
the studied IAEA specifications and we assigned each
of them a code having the form Threshold_i, where i
is the index. A threshold condition represents one of
the rule premises and is assigned with a logical
operation for checking the condition, and a threshold
dose, which is a reference value for a given physical
quantity. The physical quantities that are relevant for
the purpose of the nuclear and radiological
verifications are:
E (Effective dose) – measured for the entire
organism or for T (the tissue or organ of interest),
H (Equivalent dose) – to express the stochastic
health effects on the foetus, thyroid or any
other organ, and
AD (Absorbed dose) – due to the external
exposure of torso, skin, tissue and foetus, or
due to the internal exposure of red marrow,
thyroid, lung, colon and foetus.
An action has a name that indicates what are the
measures to be taken by the emergency personnel,
domain specialists and various responsible
authorities, to avoid or reduce the effects of a
presumable disaster. See several examples in the last
column from Table 1. From the IAEA reports we
extracted 25 possible actions, assigned with a code
Action_i; the conclusion / decision of a rule may
reunite several such actions. A constraint for the time
or space to apply each action may exist, to specify that
it has to be performed urgently or immediately, to
certain objects, or to an entire area.
Based on this knowledge base, we defined the
decision tree from Figure 3, where the decisions were
organized in respect with the types of risks (R1, R2
and R3) correspondent to prevention, protection and
emergency response to nuclear and radiological
situations.
3.4 Processes
The IAEA reports studied for obtaining the
knowledge base of rules include the representation of
several processes, like the situation assessment in the
contamination of large or moderate areas (IAEA,
2011). However, for awareness purposes, we needed
to show the big picture and not only details for
specific procedures to be followed by specialists. For
this purpose, we distributed the threshold conditions,
rules and activities into three groups, in respect with
the type of risk they are recommended for, and we
represented three processes, for prevention (risk type
R1), population protection (risk type R2) and
emergency response (risk type R3).
Figure 4 illustrates the prevention process
represented in BPMN. The tasks, notated as
rectangles with rounded corners, correspond to the
measurements of physical quantities necessary in
decision making and to the actions recommended by
IAEA (previously explained in Section 3.2).
The decisions, represented as diamonds in
BPMN, verify whether the threshold conditions are
met, by comparing the measured values with the
reference levels from the IAEA safety guides. In
respect with the threshold conditions fulfilled or not,
the sequence flow advances to the actions
recommended in that situation.
The timer intermediate events, represented with
the clock icon, correspond to the time frames
mentioned in Section 3.3. For example, two days after
the incident, if the effective dose measured in tissues
is greater or equal to 10 Sv, it is recommended to
shelter, in order to reduce the exposure to radiation.
4 APPLICATION
The knowledge described in Section 3 was applied for
the development of an educational and awareness
platform with Tiki Wiki, creating wiki pages
correspondent to the Nuclear-Watch ontology
concepts and capitalizing the Semantic Links
functionality to define relations between them. Thus,
we introduced new link types that are mutually
inverted, to improve the navigability and the search
capabilities.
The platform also contains a simulator of the rule-
based system where it is possible to introduce the date
of the presumable nuclear incident, a set of values for
the relevant physical quantities presented in Section
3.2 and the date when the measurements were taken.
Based on these inputs, an inference engine is run, and
the recommended actions are displayed to the user.
For the purpose of this simulator, the representation
of knowledge was done in Extensible Markup
Language (XML), based on an appropriate schema
for creating a unitary structure and a specific content.
The knowledge base has specific files for each
concept necessary for executing the rule beha-
viour, with child elements that correspond to the class
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Nuclear or
Radiological
Event
Threashold_2
OR Threashold_7
OR Threashold_9
OR Threashold_12
R1
Action_5
R3
R2
Action_7
Action_8
Action_3
Action_2
Action_1
Action_9
Action_10
Action_11
Action_12
Action_13
Action_14
Action_15
Action_16
Action_17
Action_18
Action_19
Action_20
Action_21
Action_22
Action_23
Action_24
Action_25
Action_6
Threashold_5
OR Threashold_11
Threashold_17
OR Threashold_18
OR Threashold_19
OR Threashold_20
OR Threashold_21
OR Threashold_22
END
Threashold_12
Threashold_2
OR Threashold_7
OR Threashold_9
OR Threashold_12
Threashold_1
Threashold_2
Threashold_3
Threashold_4
Threashold_6
Threashold_10
Threashold_12
Threashold_11
Threashold_9
Figure 3: Decision tree for prevention, protection and
emergency response.
attributes from Figure 2, e.g.:
the representation of actions, having five child
elements: actionCode, actionName, target,
constraint and purpose;
the representation of timeframes, with three
child elements: timeFrameCode,
timeFrameName and multiplicity;
the representation of threshold conditions, with
ten child elements: thresholdCode,
thresholdDose, measuringUnit,
measuredQuantity, operation, exposureType,
exposureTime, deltaDays, note and constraint.
Measure
H
Tyroid
Iodine
prophylaxis
Decontami-
nation
>=50 mSv
2 days
Several
days
1 week
1 month
1 year
Measure E
T
Permanent
relocation
>= 1Sv
Measure E
T
Sheltering
>= 10 mSv
Measure
H
Skin
Contamination
control
Urgent
decontamination
>= 0.1 Sv
Discretionary
decontamination
>= 10 mSv
Measure E
T
Evacuation
Food, milk, water
restrictions
>=50 mSv
Measure E
T
Temporary
relocation
Discretionary
decontamination
>=30 mSv
Measure E
T
Replace
food, milk,
water
>=5 mSv
Urgent
decontamination
Figure 4: Prevention process.
Although its main purpose was to create
awareness in general, the platform was also used in
educational settings, for junior students in power
engineering, who can visualize fundamental notions
about the physical phenomena related to nuclear
facilities, understand the alert and early warning
systems, study legal aspects and learn more about the
Knowledge-based Education and Awareness about the Radiological and Nuclear Hazards
161
organizational framework responsible of emergency
situations. Moreover, the teachers were allowed to
define new wiki pages, edit the existing content, and
introduce new navigation links based on semantics.
More details on the educational aspects and the tests
performed were given in (Ionita et al., 2016).
5 CONCLUSIONS
The paper presented several representations of
knowledge for education and awareness about
nuclear and radiological vulnerabilities, applied for
the development of a platform with semantic
functionality. First, we introduced the Nuclear-Watch
ontology, based on a selection of concepts made by
specialists with academic and research profiles,
which was represented in OWL and linked with other
existing ontologies with a larger scope, i.e.
vulnerability assessment and disaster management.
The ontology was then used for organizing the Tiki
Wiki platform and for introducing semantic links.
Then, we defined a set of rules for assessing a
situation related to a nuclear or radiological risk and
offering information about the recommended actions
to be taken by authorities responsible with emergency
management. The premises are the measurements
taken for radiation doses, the timeframe from the
presumable accident, and the type of risk. All the
rules conform to the specifications of the
International Atomic Energy Agency and are applied
within a simulator accessible from the platform, with
educational scope.
Finally, for awareness purposes, we grouped the
rules into three categories in respect with the type of
risk, and we represented business processes
correspondent to prevention, protection and
emergency response.
Future work should also include cooperation with
experts from social sciences and humanities, to
investigate how such a platform would be perceived
by the large public, and what are the elements to be
adapted. This might concern the ontology concepts
for awareness purposes, the level of detail of their
descriptions in the wiki pages, the semantic links, and
the look-and-feel of the rule-based simulator.
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
This work was partially supported by the FSS project
no. 114/GP/10.04.2019.
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