| Literature DB >> 17687440 |
John Molitor1, Michael Jerrett, Chih-Chieh Chang, Nuoo-Ting Molitor, Jim Gauderman, Kiros Berhane, Rob McConnell, Fred Lurmann, Jun Wu, Arthur Winer, Duncan Thomas.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Although numerous epidemiologic studies now use models of intraurban exposure, there has been little systematic evaluation of the performance of different models.Entities:
Mesh:
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Year: 2007 PMID: 17687440 PMCID: PMC1940074 DOI: 10.1289/ehp.9849
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Environ Health Perspect ISSN: 0091-6765 Impact factor: 9.031
Figure 1Location map of communities in CHS study. All communities are located in Southern California (see inset)
Figure 2Directed acyclic graph (DAG) for entire model.
NO2 effects on lung function.
| Model | Estimate (% change) | 95% credible interval | Width of 95% CI | Total DIC (small is better) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Without spatial errors | ||||
| Base | −0.159 | −0.374 to 0.017 | 0.390 | −308.560 |
| Base + dist | −0.152 | −0.312 to −0.005 | 0.308 | −331.160 |
| Base + dist.buffer | −0.163 | −0.348 to 0.002 | 0.350 | −311.526 |
| Base + addt150m | −0.163 | −0.360 to 0.005 | 0.365 | −311.046 |
| Base + caline | −0.135 | −0.273 to −0.004 | 0.269 | −349.570 |
| With spatial errors | ||||
| Base | −0.131 | −0.249 to −0.015 | 0.234 | −368.481 |
| Base + dist | −0.131 | −0.238 to −0.023 | 0.215 | −408.516 |
| Base + dist.buffer | −0.122 | −0.238 to −0.005 | 0.233 | −365.369 |
| Base + addt150m | −0.135 | −0.252 to −0.020 | 0.233 | −370.630 |
| Base + caline | −0.129 | −0.236 to −0.023 | 0.213 | −418.446 |
dist, distance to nearest freeway. Base = NO2 exposure level was estimated without any predictors of exposure level (level 2 in Equation 2). Base + dist = NO2 exposure level was estimated by distance to a freeway in exposure level (level 2 in Equation 2). Base + dist.buffer = NO2 exposure level was estimated by the categorized distance to a freeway in exposure level (level 2 in Equation 2). Base + addt150m = NO2 exposure level was estimated by the traffic counts within 150 m in exposure level (level 2 in Equation 2). Base + CALINE = NO2 exposure level was estimated by predicted NO2 level based on CALINE model.
Figure 3Spatial versus nonspatial effects across models. Abbreviations: w, with; w/o, without.
Figure 4Variances of the individual-level spatial and independent residual terms for each California community in the exposure model Equation 2 for different choices of exposure predictors. (See text for definition of the variances plotted.) Numbers in parentheses indicate sample size.
Figure 5Variances of the individual-level spatial and independent residual terms for each community in the lung function model Equation 1 for different choices of exposure predictors. (See text for definition of the variances plotted.)
Figure 6Variances of the community-level spatial and independent residual terms in the exposure model Equation 5 for different choices of exposure predictors. (See text for definition of the variances plotted.)
Figure 7Variances of the community-level spatial and independent residual terms in the lung function model Equation 4 for different choices of exposure predictors. (See text for definition of the variances plotted.)
Figure 8Comparison of different levels of NO2.