Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
307814 | Structural Safety | 2009 | 9 Pages |
Modern seismic risk assessment strives to support risk mitigation by providing insight into the performance of civil infrastructure, including buildings, bridges and transportation and utility systems, subjected to severe earthquakes. A fully-coupled seismic risk or safety assessment of a structural system, and its accompanying analysis of uncertainty, provides estimates of the annual probability of exceeding pre-defined performance levels, defined either in terms of structural responses or more qualitatively defined damage states. All sources of uncertainty, both inherent and knowledge-based, should be included in risk assessment; however, the manner in which they are displayed depends on the preferences of the stakeholders and decision-makers. This paper illustrates how such uncertainties are propagated through a seismic risk assessment of steel frame building structures that are typical of regions of low-to-moderate seismicity in the Central and Eastern United States and explores some of the implications for risk-informed evaluation of civil infrastructure.