Title of article :
Spatio-temporal modeling of chronic PM10 exposure for the Nurses’ Health Study
Author/Authors :
Jeff D. Yanosky، نويسنده , , Christopher J. Paciorek، نويسنده , , Joel Schwartz، نويسنده , , Francine Laden، نويسنده , , Robin Puett، نويسنده , , Helen H. Suh، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2008
Pages :
16
From page :
4047
To page :
4062
Abstract :
Chronic epidemiological studies of airborne particulate matter (PM) have typically characterized the chronic PM exposures of their study populations using city- or county-wide ambient concentrations, which limit the studies to areas where nearby monitoring data are available and which ignore within-city spatial gradients in ambient PM concentrations. To provide more spatially refined and precise chronic exposure measures, we used a Geographic Information System (GIS)-based spatial smoothing model to predict monthly outdoor PM10 concentrations in the northeastern and midwestern United States. This model included monthly smooth spatial terms and smooth regression terms of GIS-derived and meteorological predictors. Using cross-validation and other pre-specified selection criteria, terms for distance to road by road class, urban land use, block group and county population density, point- and area-source PM10 emissions, elevation, wind speed, and precipitation were found to be important determinants of PM10 concentrations and were included in the final model. Final model performance was strong (cross-validation R2=0.62), with little bias (−0.4 μg m−3) and high precision (6.4 μg m−3). The final model (with monthly spatial terms) performed better than a model with seasonal spatial terms (cross-validation R2=0.54). The addition of GIS-derived and meteorological predictors improved predictive performance over spatial smoothing (cross-validation R2=0.51) or inverse distance weighted interpolation (cross-validation R2=0.29) methods alone and increased the spatial resolution of predictions. The model performed well in both rural and urban areas, across seasons, and across the entire time period. The strong model performance demonstrates its suitability as a means to estimate individual-specific chronic PM10 exposures for large populations.
Keywords :
geographic information system , Spatial smoothing , Generalized additive models , air pollution , particulate matter
Journal title :
Atmospheric Environment
Serial Year :
2008
Journal title :
Atmospheric Environment
Record number :
761055
Link To Document :
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