by Robert Bradley » Sat Sep 27, 2008 10:05 am
Firstly, thank you for your offer of help in finding the effectiveness of a dog search - I am considering a PhD at the moment on the effectiveness of search resources (and if I do will need lots and lots of goodwill and assistance). There is actually a sound methodology, based on experiment, to give a POD figure for search resources such as foot searchers and aerial resources, like helicopters, which search managers can use to back up their rationale for their search plan should they wish, or need to. This was in essence what my presentation was about last weekend. There are a few issues with this data, however, that would need to be ironed out before it could all be used prior to putting out search resources, in order to optimally plan a search to maximise POS. This is one area in which I'm considering research.
Congratulations by the way on using the term effectiveness too. Too often searchers (and indeed some researchers) use the term POD incorrectly when describing the results of searches.
I don't know whether I have been misinterpreted here - despite the lack of evidence into the effectiveness of a dog search, I in no way doubt their ability. I just believe that the way the assessments work unfairly put dogs, handlers and search managers in a position where they are not using the strengths of the dogs' ability.
Moving back to the route and path issue - I think the results of your "experiement", Daryl, would actually back-up my rationale in this. I can guarantee that the time difference for doing the area search would be much greater proportionally than that of the R&P.
It is always important to remember that the purpose of the search manager is not to maximise POD, but to maximise POS - finding the misper quickly. In order to do this the search manager must prioritise search areas and search resources to put into them. It is here that I believe the issue lies. You have a foot team and a dog team, and a R&P and an area. Which do you put in where? From a maximising POS point of view only - the dog should be put into the open area and the foot team down the R&P. (This I believe would stay the same, despite the level of assessment of the dog & handler) This is where a dog team differs from a mountain bike team - mountain bikes cannot be used effectively to cover open areas, therefore by using them to hastily cover R&Ps you are using them to their strength.
All search resources miss, dogs, foot teams and helicopters. In order to maximise the overall POS of a search, we have to increase the risk of missing in one area, in order to increase our chances of finding in another area. This is a fact of search which many find uncomfortable but is the way it is. By introducing POD when discussing R&Ps I probably mislead readers into a false premise that POD was important in the issue - I apologise. What I was trying to imply was that foot searchers can carry out a R&P quite effectively - whereas they have a far lower POD using critical separation for an area search. The dog team will as Daryl says cover the ground much quicker to achive a similar if not higher POD. From a search management point of view, therefore, using a dog to do the R&P and the foot team to do the area lowers the POS considerable and is a bad search plan.
With regard to limiting an area using dogs, the same sort of rationale applies. Is it really a best use of resources? Mountain bikes would do this far more effeciently, for example. Here, of course, we also have to take into account the new ISRID data on mobility times for mispers. I haven't had time to study it in much detail but it seems to show that certain types of misper do not continue to move after quite short times (often before SAR teams are called out).
Finally - I know I can waffle on about this sort of thing for ages - although some believe it is, and will be, impossible to get sweep width figures for dogs (I would disagree) it actually doesn't matter. I haven't done the maths but unless the sweep width figure of a dog was less than about a quarter of that of a foot searcher - what I say must be true. Anyone on here really believe that a dog cannot sense a misper in under 4 metres (using the lowest sweep width figure from the US experiments)? When I get time I will try to estimate how low the sweep width figure of a dog must be for it to be used differently in order to maximise POS but generally most dog handlers believe that their dog can discover mispers several hundred metres away in the right conditions. And, unlike sight, with scent there are numerously more detection opportunities. And so, in order to maximise the POS for a search, in my mind (and no one has yet said anything to disprove or change my opinion on this - I'm always more than happy to be corrected) dogs are far more efficient than foot searchers at doing area searches compared to R&P searches and should be used as such.