Browsing by Author "Amidon, Tim, committee member"
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Item Open Access Mapping values at risk, assessing building loss and evaluating stakeholder expectations of wildfire mitigation in the wildland-urban interface(Colorado State University. Libraries, 2020) Caggiano, Michael, author; Hoffman, Chad, advisor; Amidon, Tim, committee member; Cheng, Antony S., committee member; Hawbaker, Todd, committee memberThe Wildland-Urban Interface (WUI) is an area where residential development extends into undeveloped land. When WUI development occurs in hazard-prone fire-adapted ecosystems, wildfires can have detrimental impacts on human communities by destroying buildings and infrastructure. Wildfires that cause substantial building loss are known as WUI disasters because of their high social and economic costs. WUI disasters tend to occur when wildfires ignite under extreme burning conditions and threaten a large number of homes in hazardous conditions relative to firefighting resources. This combination of factors can lead to significant home loss. WUI disasters annually result in billions of dollars in fire suppression costs and destroy thousands of homes Governments, land managers, and effected stakeholders respond to this threat in numerous ways as they attempt to mitigate the impacts of wildfires and reduce losses in WUI communities. Although wildfire mitigation efforts emphasize the removal of nearby flammable vegetation and the use of nonflammable building materials, one of the critical steps involves developing a map of communities and buildings at risk in the WUI. Despite broad-scale mapping efforts, most WUI maps do not identify building locations at sufficiently fine scales to estimate fire exposure and inform wildfire planning. Defensible space is promoted as the most effective way to reduce home ignition; however, questions remain surrounding its interactions with fire response, and its efficacy under the wide range of potential fire behavior to which homes could be exposed. This dissertation sought to realize three goals: first, it examined the potential of new technologies to map the WUI and the buildings within it at fine scales; second, it evaluated how well existing WUI mapping efforts capture the pattern of building loss observed during WUI disasters; and third, it examined stakeholder perspectives on the efficacy and interactions of defensible space and fire response with regards to protecting homes from WUI disasters. Chapter two evaluates the ability of Object Based Image Analysis to extract WUI building locations from orthoimagery of the wildland-urban interface by testing accuracy and error at multiple scales. I found the approach can extract building locations with high rates of accuracy, and minimal user input. Extracting building locations using this approach can lead to comprehensive datasets of building locations in the WUI, which can be used to create more detailed maps of buildings exposed to wildfires. Such maps have utility for risk mapping, fuel treatment prioritization, and incident management, and can lead to a better understanding regarding the spatial patterns of home loss. Chapter three leverages building location data to quantify the impacts of WUI disasters and evaluate the accuracy of WUI maps. I compare how well existing polygon-based SILVIS WUI maps and point-based WUI maps capture the pattern of building loss and assess building loss in relation to the core components of the WUI definition. Findings can be used to improve existing WUI maps, create point-based WUI maps from building location datasets, identify which homes are most in need of defensible space, and refine risk mapping and identification of wildfire exposure zones. Finally, chapter four assesses stakeholder perspectives regarding the efficacy of defensible space and its interactions with fire response with regards to the stakeholders' ability to protect homes from WUI disasters. This is related to the prior mapping efforts because it speaks to the ways stakeholders co-manage wildfire risk with fire protection authorities, and the actions they take to protect threatened homes mapped using the methods evaluated in chapters one and two. These qualitative methods suggest a wide range in expectations of defensible space efficacy, both in theory and in practice. It is likely that numerous factors reduce the perceived and actual efficacy of defensible space.Item Open Access Multimodality across the curriculum(Colorado State University. Libraries, 2023) Mangialetti, Tony, author; Palmquist, Mike, advisor; Amidon, Tim, committee member; Balgopal, Meena, committee memberThis thesis explored the connection between multimodality and writing across the curriculum (WAC) to learn what characteristics of multimodal activities, documents, and pedagogy could be used to increase the effectiveness of a WAC program. The thesis is based on a study during which 46 participants were surveyed and 16 of those participants were interviewed. Two leading WAC programs' websites were analyzed to determine the role multimodality played in each program. The surveys and interviews were analyzed using a grounded approach. The research supporting this study looked at WAC pedagogy—specifically writing to learn, writing engage, and writing in the disciplines—to learn what skills students are being asked to learn. Scholarship from WAC was also used to learn what WAC programs are currently doing with multimodality. From this research and study, seven principles were developed for WAC programs that seek to incorporate and implement multimodality.Item Open Access Re-phrasing turf-human relations: opening space to imagine more polite practices with turfgrasses(Colorado State University. Libraries, 2021) Egret, Cookie, author; Szymanski, Erika, advisor; Amidon, Tim, committee member; Koski, Tony, committee memberThis thesis aims to induce wonder and cooperation towards enacting turfgrass formations and discourses in more reciprocal ways. I amplify Kenneth Burke's take on rhetoric as the art of inducing cooperation, but extend this definition to everyday multispecies relations. In the midst of increasingly unpredictable and unstable climatic conditions, it's imperative to collaborate creatively across disciplines, but also with the biotic relations we co-create worlds with. As a scholar in rhetoric and composition, I perform a discursive analysis on an aspect or slice of the myriad discourses enabling and constraining turfgrass practices. I use rhetorical and social studies methods to analyze thirteen scientific articles on turf from the International Turfgrass Society Research Journal. My qualitative research is undergirded by interdisciplinary theories that emphasize material relations and historical conditions. My findings let me theorize that turf is a complex assemblage, currently governed and enacted according to anthropocentric aesthetic principles of aboveground turf canopy quality, uniformity and performance. From this grounded theory, I hope to open space towards cultivating other ways of knowing and attending to turfgrass assemblages that might sustain diverse relations and lifeways. Our interconnected futures depend on a shared ability to respond and become response-able with multispecies others.