When panic hits, having pre-decided answers to recurring questions—where's the nearest safe exit, who has the first aid kit, which neighbor has the generator—frees up mental space for actual novel problems. An AI-guided decision tree isn't about computers making choices; it's about outsourcing routine logic so you think clearly under pressure.
A decision tree isn't a plant—it's a flowchart that maps out choices and outcomes. Think of it like a choose-your-own-adventure book: "If there's fire in your kitchen, go to Step 2. If there's smoke but no visible fire, go to Step 3." But instead of an author deciding what happens, AI creates these maps based on emergency protocols and your family's specific situation.
Decision trees are incredibly helpful during emergencies because they eliminate the paralysis of not knowing what to do. When you're scared, your brain can't easily make complex decisions. A well-built decision tree tells you the next single action, then the next, then the next—removing the cognitive burden when your brain is in crisis mode.
Imagine your home's smoke alarm goes off at 2 AM. Your brain is foggy, you're scared. Instead of trying to remember your entire emergency plan, an AI guides you through a decision tree:
Every branch tells you the exact next action—get to kitchen, use fire extinguisher, evacuate, call 911—rather than expecting you to remember your full plan while panicked.
Emergency instruction manuals tell you what to do in generic situations. But your family has specific needs. Your elderly parent with arthritis can't crawl out a window. Your child with autism might have a meltdown during evacuation. Your family's decision tree accounts for these realities, guiding you through contingencies specific to your household.
AI can create decision trees for scenarios like: "Our house has no power," "One family member is injured," "We need to evacuate," "Someone is in a location different from home." Each tree answers the same pattern of questions to guide you to the right action.
The beauty of decision trees is they work even when you're completely panicked and overwhelmed. You don't need to remember anything except "follow the next instruction on the tree."
Try this: Ask an AI to create a simple decision tree for a fire evacuation scenario that includes your family's specific needs (young children, elderly parent, pet, mobility issues, etc.). Walk through it together—notice how each branch eliminates options and makes the next action clear.
Peri can explain this concept, give practical examples, help you decide whether it applies to your situation, or recommend a journey if appropriate.
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